Musharraf foe hopes youths rise up

Its important to note the role played by students in pak politics and overthrowing of regimes in 1968 and 1977. Before student politics from campuses was banned.

http://www.latimes.com/media/photo/2007-11/33747445.jpg

[RIGHT]Farooq Naeem / AFP/Getty Images[/RIGHT]
VOICE OF PROTEST: Cricket legend Imran Khan speaks to opposition party activists in October. He has been in hiding since Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf began rounding up critics.

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A rumble of dissent is heard at Pakistan’s colleges. Imran Khan, who plans a protest rally, wants to seize on that discontent.

By Henry Chu, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
November 12, 2007

LAHORE, Pakistan — Imran Khan – cricket legend, philanthropist, fugitive – is sprawled on the sofa, looking relaxed and confident for a man on the run. Animation seizes his athletic frame when he addresses a favorite topic: the youth of Pakistan.

“The young have one thing, which is passion and idealism. They look at things in black and white, good and bad,” he said. “They’re not cynical at that stage. They haven’t taken their beatings in life. They’re not concerned about their mortgages.”

                                                           But those beatings could happen sooner rather than later if Khan's plans come to pass.

In hiding from the police, whom he escaped by jumping over a wall at his home, Khan is aiming to stage a rally here this week that he hopes will draw hordes of young people to protest the state of emergency declared Nov. 3 by President Pervez Musharraf. Thousands of outspoken critics of Musharraf were locked up in the security sweep that failed to catch Khan.

Stirrings of unrest already have begun bubbling up at colleges and universities across the country, from Islamabad to Peshawar to Karachi. Now trying to organize online petitions and on-campus protests, a generation of Pakistanis more used to Pepsi than to politics is showing tentative signs of awakening and could open a new battlefront for Musharraf’s military regime.

Last week, hundreds of students at the prestigious Lahore University of Management Sciences, or LUMS, thronged a demonstration against emergency rule. They jeered at Musharraf and waved placards in support of independent judges he has sacked.

For senior Zahra Sabri, the rally gave vent to the despairing anger some of her peers feel at the lack of opportunity and the morass of corruption and repression in which their country seems to be mired.

“This time the students really came out – they’re really fed up. All their lives, they haven’t seen any good times in Pakistan,” said Sabri, 23. “We were born in the early '80s, and since then, I don’t think we’ve had one moment of hopefulness.”

But the demonstrators last week were blocked from taking their protest into the streets by police, who were lined up outside the university gate, batons at the ready – a scene repeated at other schools around Lahore, Pakistan’s second-largest city. At a local science and engineering university, three students were reportedly arrested after scuffling with authorities.

What haunts the government is the memory of the starring role students have played in toppling leaders at key moments over the last 40 years.

In 1968, students were at the forefront of resistance against the despotic, corrupt regime of President Ayub Khan, one in the long line of generals to rule this country. Despite a repressive security apparatus at his disposal, Khan was forced to step down a year later.

Young people also turned out en masse against Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, the father of Benazir Bhutto, Musharraf’s biggest rival and herself a former premier. The elder Bhutto was ousted from power by the army in 1977, then hanged in 1979.

With those examples in mind, later Pakistani governments launched a campaign to de-politicize college campuses, banning political activity and embargoing student unions.

At the same time, many parents of today’s students are disillusioned veterans of the old movements, soured on politics and intent on steering their children clear of activism.

The result, critics lament, is a student body that largely spends its time comparing designer clothes and electronic gadgets when not in the library studying.

“We aren’t given a chance to know what’s happening politically or out in the wider society,” said Adil Shahzad, a 25-year-old graduate student at the University of the Punjab. “Because of this apathy, we don’t even help somebody dying in the road. This is the kind of indifference that’s being instilled in us.”

Many observers were therefore surprised, and in some cases exhilarated, by the inchoate political rumblings beginning to take form on various campuses, particularly LUMS. Students at the private institution hail from some of Pakistan’s most illustrious and well-to-do families.

“The students of these elite institutions were least expected to speak up,” an editorial in the Dawn newspaper said Sunday. “Now that they have done so, catching the analysts and media on the wrong foot, they show how widespread the anger against Musharraf is.”

It is an anger that Khan, the cricketer-turned-politician, is eager to harness. “This is a whole force that’s untapped,” he said.

Khan, 54, has been on the run since the night the state of emergency was declared, when the police came knocking. He has slept in a different bed every night. During an interview with foreign journalists at a safe house, the curtains were drawn to keep out prying eyes.

He is revered as one of his sport’s all-time greats and admired for his charitable work, especially a hospital he set up for poor cancer patients. He drummed up the money for that by motivating young people to go out and become fundraisers for him, as “mini-Imrans,” he said.

Now Khan hopes they’ll answer his appeal to join him in the streets at the rally he is planning, in spite of the threat of arrest for both them and him.

“I want to get the students out,” he said. “If you have to [make] sacrifices, this is the time. What you cannot do is sit on the fence anymore.”

But practicalities intrude. At LUMS, final exams are scheduled this week. New to such dilemmas, some students are also agonizing over whether it’s worth acting on principle if it means jeopardizing their future.

Sabri, the LUMS senior, is on the verge of graduating and has won a Fulbright scholarship to the United States. "Our parents say, ‘You have this chance that people would die for. . . . Why are you messing it up now? If you go to jail, if you have a record, would the United States give you a visa?’ " she said.

Many of her peers continue to remain aloof from politics. But Sabri thinks they can be coaxed out of their shells by two different scenarios: If there’s an alternative to the uninspiring choice of national leaders out there now, or to the corrupted spoils system that politics has become; or, on the other hand, if there are no alternatives at all to a bleak, depressing future.

“If they see an avenue open, something to get excited about, they’ll come out then,” Sabri said. “Or they’ll come out when they’re so desperate that there’s no other option.”

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Re: Musharraf foe hopes youths rise up

Long live Imran Khan...

Re: Musharraf foe hopes youths rise up

God Bless the Pakistani students. May they rise to the challenge.

Re: Musharraf foe hopes youths rise up

And find their families shipped to Gitmo by our beloved dictator.

Re: Musharraf foe hopes youths rise up

In that case they should sit at home and enjoy the unprecedented economic growth. :k:

Re: Musharraf foe hopes youths rise up

Aalsi lagta hai kaafi mewa aa raha hai aapke ghar. yeh unprecedented economic growth kahin sirf aap kay ghar to nahin ho rahi. aise akeley akeley khud nahin khaatey bhai hum awam ka bhi kuch khyaal karo!

Re: Musharraf foe hopes youths rise up

Another interesting excerpt (thanks to Spock)

Dear Friends,

The martial rule in Pakistan is turning into a reign of terror for ordinary citizens. Thousands of lawyers, journalists, human rights activists and professionals from all walks of life have been detained and held without charge. At the same time, the regime has allowed criminals with proven links to international terrorism to walk freely out of prison, and continues to cede vast tracts of Pakistani territory to militants. By suspending the constitution and disbanding the judicial edifice, the regime has become the prosecutor, the judge and the executioner for anyone who stands up to it. As the people of Pakistan continue to resist the dictatorship, it grows desperate by the day, turning evermore to measures unheard of before.

Yesterday, 12th November, the regime crossed a new threshold by shamelessly attacking, arresting and detaining schoolchildren in Islamabad. Around 100 students, most of them between 14 and 18 years of age, were staging a silent protest by walking outside a public park holding placards when they were accosted by Islamabad Police.The Police told the students that, because of their age, they needed special approval from the district magistrate’s office to walk any further and that they had to wait until such approval arrived. The students, unwilling to challenge the police, obliged and sat down where they were. Twenty minutes later, the students were informed that they had not been given permission to proceed any further, and were asked to return to their starting point and disperse. Once again, the students obliged, showing that they did not want to confront the Police who had clearly been given specific orders from above.

As they were walking back, the students were surrounded by more than 500 policemen –their ranks now reinforced with Punjab Police and the heavily armed commandos of the Anti-Terrorism Force –and were asked to disperse immediately. When some of the students pointed out that they were merely walking back to their starting point, as previously ordered, the Police turned violent. They started manhandling the children and hitting them with batons, pushing them into police vans. 48 students were physically assaulted and detained, amongst them a 12-year old boy. Even after they had turned themselves in without resistance, many of them were beaten with sticks and severely bruised. They were detained in the Margalla prison for hours without charge, and were prevented from meeting visitors or making calls. They were eventually released after they had signed written assurances not to attend protests against the government in the future.
This is another shameless act by an increasingly brutal and scared regime. We must not allow this to go on.

Student Protest in Islamabad

Re: Musharraf foe hopes youths rise up

But do 14-18 year olds know excatly what they're doing?

Re: Musharraf foe hopes youths rise up

Today youth showed their maturity and risen from their calmness in Lahore where Imran went to University to make them rise. Unfortunately, the way they rose, Musharraf’s foe and opposition parties must be feeling scared. It seems that students decided to support economical growth and prosperity Musharraf government is giving them, than turmoil, corruption, nepotism, destruction, and darkness opposition and Musharraf’s foe are promising them.

Re: Musharraf foe hopes youths rise up

Did anyone read the 2006-2007 report by SBP?
that reli shows how much growth has come to pakistan..

Here is one such review..

Re: Musharraf foe hopes youths rise up

^ What revelance does that have to what we are discussing here?

Re: Musharraf foe hopes youths rise up

Economic growth mentioned in the earlier post.