Stay away please..........will ya?

No exit - Newspaper - DAWN.COM

**sad but a harsh reality..I have been saying this for years and now everyone is realizing this..We are fast becoming a nation of Walking Dead.

honestly rest of the world should completely ban Pakistanis from traveling internationally until we resolve polio virus issue 200%…How long before the world wakes up to the fact that it is easy to get a doctor to sign such a document for a small fee without giving an inoculation? we are risking the health of rest of the world…and that is not fair…**No exit
*By Irfan Husain

         Published about 19 hours ago
   
                                                                             *[TABLE="class: media media--left one-whole palm--one-whole"]
  • AROUND 30 years ago, I saw a production of Jean Paul Sartre’s existentialist play No Exit (Huis Clos in French) at the Avignon Theatre Festival in France.

I recall the sense of claustrophobia generated by the three actors who have been locked in a room for all eternity. Initially, they don’t know why they are there until it dawns on them that they are being punished in the afterlife. “Hell,” as Sartre observes so pithily, “is other people”.

This, it seems, is increasingly our fate in Pakistan as door after door shuts on us. Sri Lanka was one of the few countries that issued Pakistanis visas on arrival at Colombo airport. No longer, alas. I feel personally deprived as I have been going to the lovely island regularly for some 15 years, and spending much of the winter there.
[HR][/HR] Door after door is shutting on Pakistanis.

[HR][/HR] This change in policy has been caused by the hundreds of Pakistanis who have claimed political asylum in the country. Ahmadis and Christians, suffering from violence and persecution in Pakistan, have been driven to this extreme measure, and who can blame them?

Over the years, visa requirements for holders of our green passports have been steadily tightened across the world. From illegal migrants to heroin smugglers to terrorists, Pakistanis have acquired an unenviable reputation for undesirable activities. Annoying as it is when I have to jump through a succession of hoops to get a visa, I do understand why other states would want to restrict the entry of Pakistanis.

The latest door to slam shut was caused by the recent attacks at Karachi and Peshawar airports. Some airlines cancelled flights to these destinations, while others have withdrawn bids to lease aircraft to PIA. This will curtail the national carrier’s operations still further.

We are so accustomed to the daily mayhem that has come to characterise Pakistan that we forget it’s not a natural state of affairs. In countries where the rule of law and the writ of the state are both firmly administered, it is almost unimaginable for terrorists to take pot shots at landing airliners or storm airports with impunity.

Then there is the polio scare that has caused the World Health Organisation to demand that Pakistanis travelling abroad carry certificates proving they have been inoculated recently. How long before the world wakes up to the fact that it is easy to get a doctor to sign such a document for a small fee without giving an inoculation?

Just as it is becoming harder for Pakistanis to travel abroad, the number of foreigners visiting our shores has fallen sharply. For most diplomats, Pakistan is no longer a family posting. Few businessmen wish to risk their lives by visiting our country. And after the murderous Nanga Parbat attack that saw 10 foreign mountaineers murdered by TTP killers last year, not even the most foolhardy climber would wish to come.

Another field in which we have lived in isolation is sports. After the terrorist attack on the Sri Lankan cricket team in 2009 in Lahore, no foreign sportsmen have toured Pakistan. Again, who can blame them? We had promised the Sri Lankans the kind of security the president gets, but in the event, the police officer in charge was having breakfast when the terrorists opened fire in broad daylight.

It is this kind of incompetence at every level that has emboldened criminals and terrorists ali ke. When they know that our law enforcement agencies and judiciary have become incapable of arresting or convicting them, there’s no deterrence left. If by a stroke of bad luck they are apprehended, they are either busted out of jail by jihadis, or bailed out by weak judges.

This environment of impunity has given rise to a culture of violence and intolerance. The first to feel the brunt of this lawlessness are members of our minorities and women. It has pushed thousands of Shia Hazaras to risk their lives by travelling in leaky boats to possible refuge in Australia. I read recently that hundreds of Ahmadis were living unhappily in China, but I suppose anything is better than the constant fear of violent death at the hands of fanatics.

The sum total of this intolerance, violence and ignorance has resulted in a toxic nation that the world wishes would disappear. And while life goes on for us despite the daily mayhem, outsiders look on with a kind of fascinated horror.
Apart from the direct cost in blood and money ill-spent on an elusive security, we need to factor in the indirect costs of extremism. As the world shrinks from us, students and academics have fewer opportunities to study and interact with foreigners in their fields. Our intellectual output, not very high to start with, will be further reduced.

Just as important, we will not be able to experience at first hand the wonders of the world. As our horizons contract, we will become more diminished as a people.
[EMAIL=“[email protected]”][email protected]
Published in Dawn, July 5th, 2014*

Re: Stay away please..........will ya?

as some one noted in comments, the sad news is there is no one in the political spectrum who can listen and understand. T*he Sharif brothers simply lack the intellectual depth to understand the effect of isolation on academics and the importance of "arts" in a society. PPP once under ZAB and to an extent BB understood this but sadly they are gone . IK on the other hand should know better but he is high on being a born-again zealots. Pretty hopeless....*

Re: Stay away please…will ya?

What are you saying mate? Baba Bhutto started arming Afghan zealots and Benazir organized them formally to form Taliban…bash IK as much as you want but dont twist history please… :chai:

Re: Stay away please..........will ya?

Other than this i agree with the crux of the thread. All governments (federal and provincial) need to control the menace of harassing minorities and people of other sects. Disregarding how the world perceives us due to these acts, we are risking divisions along sectarian lines dangers of which are evident in the Middle East.

Re: Stay away please…will ya?

yaar i copied that comment from comments section of that article…and pasted it as it is…

as for bhuttos, i agree with your assessment from political perspective but the comment that i posted was more from an intellectual standpoint in terms of understanding consequences of this isolation for Pakistanis

Re: Stay away please..........will ya?

Just wondering why the developed countries not use this oral polio drops thing and why all third world countries are expected to use.
I know that people in developed nations have a choice to say "yay" or "nay" to vaccines of any kind.... However, that freedom isn't allowed in third world.
I'm hardly surprised though!

Re: Stay away please..........will ya?

I was/am surprised that there were countries where they allowed visa on arrival for Pakistani passports. No more. Thanks to the thaikaydaars of Islam who insist on total isolation from the rest of the world.

They will only realize once they and their kids are refused visas to go abroad (the real garbage = corrupt politicians and corrupt military).
Until they actually start to suffer, nothing will come of it.
Such a long standing army but cannot secure the country or its borders. Only eats up the budget and conduct operations on foreign funding.

Re: Stay away please..........will ya?


yaar aisi baat nahi hai. 26 countries allow visa on arrival or travel without visa. I did full research just for GS. Here is what i found.

**
Countries where there is visa on arrival- B**urundi(*Catholic Christians), Cape Verde (*Catholic Christians), Comoros (Muslims), Djibouti (Muslims), Guinea Bissau(Muslims, traditional beliefs), Madagascar (*Christian, traditional religion), Maldives(Muslim), Mali (Muslim), Mauritania (Muslim), Mozambique (*Christians), Naurau (*Christianity, Bahai), *Nepal (*81% Hindu, 9% Buddhist), Palau (*Roman Catholic), Samoa (*entry permit on arrival, Christian), Seychelles (*entry permit on arrival, Roman Catholic), Tanzania (35% Muslim, 30% Christian), 35% native African religions), Timor-Leste (*96% Christians), Tuvalu (*Christianity) and Uganda *(Christianity)

**Visa not required- **Dominica *(Roman Catholic Christians), Ecuador (*Roman Catholic Christians), Haiti (*Catholics), Micronesia (*Christians), Saint Vincent and the Grenadines *(Christian), Trinidad and Tobago (*Christians 65%, Hindus 25%), Vanuatu *(Christianity)

In brackets i have mentioned the majority religion of each of the above countries for interest sake. Not making any point but to show there are quite a few countries where Pakistanis can get visa on arrival. *******************Out of the 26 countries where there is either visa on arrival or no visa required, 6 are Muslim majority countries and 1 is nearly equally Muslim and Christian majority. And of the countries where no visa is required at all, all 7 are non Muslim countries.*******************

In the subcontinent Nepal, a Hindu majority country and former Hindu kingdom, offers visa on arrival to Pakistanis. Some people might feel that it could be a tainted experience because of contact/living near a non muslim population but I would still say its a great place to visit. Good scenery and friendly people. :)********************

Re: Stay away please..........will ya?

^ Thanks for the list. I certainly did not know about Nepal being there too.