Monday, November 1, 2010

Independence and the Cycle of Dependence

By Ghulam Amin Beg

We hear this story again and again from our war veterans of 1948, ‘we liberated Gilgit-Baltistan from the Dogra Raj barefoot and with sticks our main weapon’. We will hear it on 1st November, the independence day of Gilgit-Baltistan.

We also often hear from our elders, that our forefathers had not enough food to sustain through winters, no shoe to wear, no blanket to warm children, no schools to enter in to learn, no hospitals to get treatment.

But we also hear that our forefathers were the happiest, their average life span over 80 and their general physique very strong. Because, they were hard working, were simple, honest and united in miseries and in happiness, resilient when disasters destroyed everything, yet they bounced back and rebuild everything from scratch through self-help.

Yet, we also observed with our own eyes that when the disaster hit this time, both Attabad landslide and its continued woes even today and the flash floods across GB and Pakistan, people were literally crying for food shortages, fuel shortages, shortage of milk, shortage of tents, blanket, cloth, even finding it difficult to survive for a week without ‘cash’ in their hands and how to fund the health and education bills? However, we also saw some communities seeing hope, and slowly returning to life again.

Yes things have changed the context and ground realities have changed from what our forefathers lived. Yes our needs and times are different. Yes we don’t need to put ourselves in their shoes. Yes there is always time and space for what we think, say and do.

But we can’t discount the argument that, we are heading towards undefined destiny, we live an alien’s life on our own homeland, at every step in government, economy and society we feel being discriminated, demoralized and dehumanized. Despite our myth of independence we are treated like a colony and forced to think, act and behave like oppressed; mute, submissive and always hands off. Isn’t it?

The overwhelming financial, social, cultural and economic challenges we face today, much of it comes because of our myth of independence, unchecked consumerism, unsustainable way of living and corrupt governance. We may say it has less to do with economics, but more to do with our political lunacy and psychology. Collectively, we suffer from chronic dependency syndrome.

It is rightly said, the strength of a community or nation is reflected in the character of its people, individual and group of citizens. While the people of Gilgit Baltistan throughout history remained fiercely independent, self-reliant and confident, we are gradually losing our identity, our character and our very purpose of being. We live in a state of dependence psychologically and have become so hesitant, unresponsive and submissive that, it seems we are being slowly poisoned or kept like mental patients giving special dozes.

Yes we get that since 1948. When Major Brown institutionalized the seeds of sectarian conflict, and when the British colonial masters before leaving Gilgit decided to link our fate with the resolution of Kashmir dispute, despite our resolve to make Gilgit-Baltistan an independent entity, and setting up of our own revolutionary structure and command and control system. Yes, the first political agent from Peshawar came with the very first order of imposing the notorious English law, the Frontier Crime Regulation- FCR in 1948.

Yes, the very first actions in the first five years were to close Kilik-Mintaka border with China, close the Ladakh-Leh passes, and disconnect the Burzil pass to Srinagar. Later during the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan the passes with Afghanistan was also closed, making Gilgit Baltistan virtually dependent on a single road and exchange link through Babusar and NWFP with Pakistan.

These were seemingly calculated moves to create dependency by cutting off external historical links and economic exchange relations, as well as through FCR clipping the wings of those, who may raise their heads and voices. The climax of it came, when whatever local autonomy was available in the form of local states and political districts these were abolished in the name of ending feudalism and bringing the areas under firm control of the district administrations. Another move was to co-opt the old aristocracy into the government structures and providing incentives. On the other hand, free hand was given to Pakistani political parties and religious groups to promote Pakistani political culture and sectarianism, while local nationalist parties were gagged, branded as anti-state and anti-Pakistan, so that no formidable voice and representation is made.
Why would the Pakistani establishment do this to Gilgit Baltistan, who voluntarily joined Pakistan, and majority of the innocent people still love to be part of whatever Pakistan is left there, and whatever the Paka Pakistanis are doing to Jinnah’s Pakistan?

The reasons are obvious. Its sheer selfishness and geo-strategic and security interests as narrowly defined in other contexts in Pakistan. The 72,496 square kilometer Gilgit-Baltistan region with over 1.4 million people lie at a geo-strategic junction between Central and South Asia, provides the only land link between Pakistan and China, borders with Indian administered Kashmir and Afghanistan on the north, with miles away from Tajikistan. It carries unique and vital catchment area for upper Indus River upon which over 80% of Pakistan’s irrigation, food production and hydroelectricity depends. The region is also known as an international biodiversity hotspot, contains the largest frozen water reserves outside the polar region, unique forest and mineral reserves, some of the world’s highest mountains, a hub where three giant mountain ranges meet, and a living museum of ancient culture and archaeological heritage on earth. GB is also a key trade corridor between landlocked western China, Central Asia and hot waters of South Asia through the Karakoram Highway and potentially rail links and gas pipelines in the future.

The Pakistani establishment thinks it can not let go Gilgit Baltistan or swing in opposing direction in any bargaining on Kashmir with India; neither has it wanted a Gilgit Baltistan which is genuinely autonomous or part and parcel of the federation of Pakistan which makes equitable claims on its share of resources. The overt assumptions are that the region is ethnically sensitive and volatile, but at the same time, there are serious misgivings about local capacities to generate revenues and to self-govern our own affairs.

And there is much credence to this assertion.

For example the little authority or powers transferred to GB over the last six decades were never fully exercised or utilized. Our capacities to legislate, plan and implement public sector programmes remain miserably corrupt and mismanaged. The best officers of Gilgit-Baltistan who serve the state institutions in Pakistan are not ready to voluntarily offer themselves to serve in Gilgit-Baltistan. The best professionals are either not interested to join the government or enter politics and keep the profession of public leadership to mediocre and special interest groups. The youth is not interested in making career choices in public administration, law, agriculture, forestry, pure sciences and the media.

There is vacuum in local governance, administration and oversight institutions. Though over the years talented young professionals are joining the administration and public sector organizations, the judiciary and the legislative assembly, yet this area is still left open to non-entities and corrupt people. Similarly, the media is still under-developed and requires dedicated professionals, both the print and electronic media and now the internet media, in order to voice peoples concerns, analyze critical issues and serve as watchdogs of public interest and conduct public accountability.

More importantly, our nationalist and left leaning parties are discredited by the agencies as anti-state and anti-social by forces of status quo. However these parties are also disconnected from the people and from ground realities that help mobilize masses at the grassroots. Hundred percent of the transportation of our main staple food, wheat is subsidized by Pakistan, 100 percent of the development fund and functioning of the government is funded by Pakistan. We are not ready to generate our own revenue system. Autonomy and independence are linked to self-reliance and self-help. Why should not Pakistan influence our policies and politics when they provide everything, not to talk of how they exploit our resources? It’s like the Americans influencing Pakistan.

This is one key reason that we remain incapacitated and are enchained in the vicious cycle of dependence. Like a captive audience or a tyrannized nation, we are controlled by officials, agencies and corrupt mafias from Islamabad and imposed by Islamabad and their local cronies.

With or against the tide, we always fail to set our strategic directions right or even fail to understand what determines the right choices to set a direction for the future.

Our social institutions, NGOs and the education system in GB foster passivity, social conformity and undermine possibilities of making the youth active agents of change. We are trained and tamed to line-up in schools and in public gatherings waiting for hours as captive audience to receive a petty government official and hear his non-sense speech. We are asked in schools and in public to stay at arms length and on the ground, while corrupt officials are decorated and respected with elevated chairs and garlands, while we are supposed to cheer up and raise slogans in praise of thy lords. We are told this is our culture to be humble, which is good, but autonomy and freedom requires that we ‘become realistic without becoming pessimistic, optimistic without becoming uncritical and critical without becoming cynical’.

We fail to do this at home, in our society, polity and education systems. This is enslaving the youth and the nation. Those who raise voice against such injustice and inhuman behaviour are termed subversive, anti-social and anti-culture and anti-Pakistan elements by the forces of status quo. Those who promote values of justice, equity, freedom, autonomy, self-reliance and national and cultural identity are considered as threats by such forces.

Only thinking minds can break this cycle of dependence. A pedagogical approach is required to critically assess, reflect back and move forward with clear direction and choices for the future.

There is a need to embed the notion of raising one’s voice and asserting one’s right to challenging authority in all its forms. Freedom is a state of mind, so is dependence. We have to change ourselves through self-examination as individuals, communities and as a nation and revitalize our core character of confidence, self-reliance, resilience, bravery and being fiercely independent, while at the same time espousing virtues of grace, wisdom, knowledge and peaceful co-existence.

Autonomy and Independence with vision, social responsibility and the capacities to retain and nurture it. Self-reliance is the key. So is mobilization of the youth and the masses through giving a new manifesto and new social agenda for change.

A new alliance of progressive, moderate and nationalist groups to revitalize the spirit of 1947-48, is very much the need of the time.

9 comments:

ilfu said...

Courtesy PamirTimes:

ilfu | November 3, 2010 at 7:51 pm

I found the article very insightful addressing a wide range of issues we are facing in GB in particular and Pakistan in general. Our forefathers lived their life very simple, happy and independent from outside influnences because they were cut off from rest of the world. But the road link to down country and China brought a whole new change in our life style which was new for us that we readily accepted. In return we lost the happy life style of our forefathers, the longivity in age , unity of our ancestors, independence of external forces.
we are now totally dependent on down country from food to cloth and we don’t know if that is the way it is supposed to or there is some other way out.

sylmarkhan said...

sylmarkhan | November 4, 2010 at 2:47 am

pakistan and the federation need to work together to make united pakistan. autonomy offered with 18th amendment is what i am talking about. we all need change. the present change in goverment were the wish of people in gilgit. in order for development to take place. we need good government. please give time to pakistan. hari singh did not merge this state so ut is dispute. but pakistan can do what necessary to bring development and government in this splendid state. i guess the writer does not see good points from the bad. the kashmiris are worse off they are militarized. pakistan can’t give government as other provinces because of dispute. instead of bickering 4 solution. pakistan should ask UN if it can make other province['s] status for gilgit. because there is no other solution. the gilgit government should join UN to ask if they could become province. so real goverment and autonomy offered to other provinces must be provided for gilgit. i don’t know what is big deal that politician can’t give what people lack, a government.

AminBeg said...

courtesy PT:

Amin Beg | November 4, 2010 at 12:52 pm

I agree with the two comments.
However, my point is autonomy is linked to relf-reliance. Though in an interconnected and interpedendent world, self reliance means seeing opportunity in ‘interdependence’, whether through cementing highland-lowland exchange relations or taking a regional approach and seeing opportunities both in China and Pakistan, and at the same time India, Central Asia and Afghanistan in that broader regional integration.
But the important thing in this scheme is to develop our own local revenue and resource base to run the government; a local taxation system, a local revenue generation, and decentralized local government system at the union council levels, that is able to sustain its localized village governments through a new legislation by the GBLA.
We should explore innovative mechanisms to fund our governance costs, and are less dependent on grant in aid from Pakistan and others.

Only a home-grown Manifesto for Self Reliance and Local Autonomy led by the youth and the literati could come up with a new social contract for GB.

Trangfa Maujood said...

Courtesy PT:

Trangfa Maujood | November 4, 2010 at 12:57 pm

Einstein is famous to have said that ‘imagination is more important than knowledge’ and this path-breaking piece of writing from GAB is testimony to that famous saying. The series of observations made here, with regards to our political culture, social attitudes, and machinations of foreign power-brokers is indeed breathtaking. On the occasion that we celebrate our so called independence day in Gilgit-Baltistan these reflections are worth paying some attention for us to be able to chart out a way forward that is reasonably decent, and provides us with some space to create, to live, to legislate, and govern ourselves. A society that is slavish, that is ruled arbitrarily by outsiders without regards to sentiments, emotions and aspirations of a people is indeed cruel and it is important that we resist this sate of cruelty in Gilgit-Baltistan. It is just and it is morally upright that we fight for our rightful place in this modern world system. The impositions of the government of Pakistan upon us have indeed frustrated an indigenous process of social and political engagement. It is only through engaged citizenship that poetry, philosophy, knowledge, values and progress can be achieved. If we choose to remain at the receiving end of external actors whether they are in the form of various NGOs, or external sponsors who originate either in Tehran, Riyadh, or Paris than we will never be able to gain the necessary recognition for our civilization. Tehran, Riyadh, and Paris should only be welcomed if they support us to strengthen our governance mechanisms, root out corruption, and enlighten our minds. Not to implement their own respective agendas.

If our young generation chooses to follow a set course of action, plays according to the rules of the game set by outsiders than we will never be able to engender a discourse of civlisation, progress and change. Hence we will be suffering from collective degeneration. Our society will either disappear and our history will be marginalized in the decades ahead. What I am suggesting here is that the new people who will inhabit these valleys of GB will be people without roots, without hearts, and without emotion. Our inheritors and coming generations will look aghast at us. In Hunza we often remember the old sayings, called Saween Bareing, and discuss them fondly with our mates because we believe that the ancient people of our lands were wise. This tells us that despite lack of international exposure or extensive inter-cultural interaction our people still had the creative capacity to evolve a distinctive culture of poetry, and poetics. We don’t often hear of such wise people nowadays. But we do hear of corrupt charlatans, Ali Madad Sher-like ‘education ministers’, PARADO owning-contractors or theekadars, and so on. Similarly the mountain water channels that were constructed by blasting off the sheer rock to water our fields is a testament to the ingenuity of our forefathers. Despite lack of technology they had the capacity to organize, innovate, work hard and create a new built environment. The sheer beauty and benevolence of our arable lands is testimony to the old. We don’t now hear about the heroic innovators in the fields of agriculture or other sciences but we do hear about empty-headed NGO managers, extremist mullahs, and land-selling lethargic youth who spend the money on luxuries of life. When will we abandon all this and refocus our society towards a better, more informed, intellectually mature, responsible and just society? This is a question that we now need to engage with, and I believe that GAB’s piece is that kind of an engaged, argumentative, and perhaps imaginative attempt to guide us through.

Trangfa Maujood
Shishper Meadows

Asim Saeed said...

Courtesy PT:

Asim Saeed | November 4, 2010 at 5:27 pm

Well addressed.
It is nodoubt that Gilgit-Baltistan has been kept under enslavement by using different means. The prime reason for this enslavment of the natives would be its stategic location of GB for the rest of the world including Pakistan.
Whether the so- called enslavement under the Pakistani establishment is harmful or not, it is quite skeptical to judge, in my opinion we need a relative approch to judge it. For nationalist mindset it is curse to live under the Pakistani establishment but for those who are tilted toward the federation of Pakistan seem themselves safer and somehow under a proper management.
As far as the independence is concerned, from whom are we going to take independence? From that country which provide you security when we are surrounded by dragons and food because we are unable of produce it for ourselves.
We are ruled by the Pakistani establishment beacuse of our own faults. Why don’t we go for the beaurocracy and grab the power in our own hands, why are we not interested in politics and try to win the decisions in our favour. We ourselves are not interested to became the part of the civil and military beauocracy, then how we shouldn’t expect other to rule us??
We talk alot about Nationalism and Nationalists. As per need of nationalism, there must be a similarity which entact the people, like German blood in Germany, Shia sect in Iran and Pashtu in KP province are the sheer forces for their nationalism. What is comman among us; the seven different dilects, the three different sects of Islam, the different cultues, and the different origination of groups of GB. So what commanlity hold us together? This differenecs are also vividly seen within nationalist forces of GB, there are dozen of nationalist forces in GB having different ideologies and most of them are the mouth piece of the imperialists.
We are not provided with our rights by the Pakistani establishment to have a check and balance upon us. So lets us be practical to get our rights. As mentioned in the article, our youth need to take part in politics, should go for civl and military beaurocracy, study law and join administration more and more, these are the components for getting our plitical and eonomical rights.
Following the so called nationalist groups is more likely to divide and surrender ourselves to other imperlists powers also.

Shazia Kawal said...

Sir!.....With all respect...The change has to come, it is inevitible, it has to come from within. Slowly but suerly people will change, getting excited will not help may be..

Patience and fortitude conquer all things, the key to everything i...s patience. You get the chicken by hatching the egg, not by smashing it..i think thats the only weapon left..

but yeah, sometimes it does feel like we need strong descipline, leadership..we take things for granted, and others, leave no stone unturned to destroy us farther.
This Nation is in desperate need of good news

Amin Beg said...

Are you saying change will come anyway and we should stick to, 'Don't Question, Don't Ask, Don't Tell Policy'??

shazia Kawal said...

sir....i know this theory, but ground realities...as i told u earlier sir ki is nation k 90% log sirf issue uthatay hn,sawal uthaty hen, elctrnc media, pirnt media..ya chahe wo koi individual...thoughts, theories,concpts, ideas boht hogai...agr hr banday ka role sirf sawal uthana ya issues py bat krna hy tu...sorry sir dont take me wrong...pata nai shaid...

Amin Beg said...

As a nation we are passing through social anxieties and phobias, unable to handle our own fears of 'what if.. i say or do this.. people may say this...syndrome. This starts at home, at personal level and group, orgs and becomes a norm and a... national character in colonial systems.
As a nation we need to come out of these anxieties, the bodily symptoms of which are increased heart beat,trembling voice, shaking hands, and sweating etc.
Like a confident, and naughty child, we need to start saying what, why, how and NO to something and yes to others.
This will make us independent, more confident and self-reliant.