With Kim Jong-il’s death,
it was but expected that the western media and its consumers would jump
into mocking everything about North Korea and its dead president.
Twitterverse (with its fake twitter profile of Kim Jong-un), Tumblrs and Facebook pages are inundated with links poking fun at the backwardness, insularity and stupidity of North Koreans. Media savvy, English-speaking, hip Pakistanis are taking part in this mock-fest wholeheartedly. This is most fascinating because Pakistan, perhaps, is more like North Korea than most other countries.
North Korea is usually dubbed as one of the poorest countries in the
world. Pakistan may not be one of the poorest countries — yet — but it sure is on its way to becoming one with a paltry two per cent growth rate
(which in any case is undermined by the high population growth rate),
soaring inflation, unprecedented unemployment and never-ending energy
crisis.
North Korea is dubbed by mainstream western media as an anachronistic
nuclear country whose population lives in abject poverty and where
political dissenters are sent to die in concentration camps. We, too,
are a country where women are buried alive in the name of tradition;
millions do not have access to either clean drinking water or
sanitation; and the lesser is said about the bonded labour tilling the
land, the better.
If North Korea is the most isolated nation in the world, we, too, are
pariahs of sorts. Getting anywhere with our green passport is an
ordeal. We have had sanctions levied on us on counts of aiding and
abetting terrorism to child labour and what not. If the US has used
trade sanctions as leverage to get North Korea to abandon its nuclear
weapons programme, we have been meted out the same treatment back in
1998 after conducting the nuclear tests.
We mocked the outpouring of grief — which may have been staged and
must have appeared contrived to western eyes — but how can we forget how
we behaved when one of our own leaders, Benazir Bhutto, died four years
ago — with fist-thumping grief, tears, chaos, mayhem and bloodshed.
We scoffed at the leadership succession plan of North Korea, mocking a
four-star general in his 20’s. But have we ever stopped to think that
we have done something quite similar — made a barely adult teenager,
Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, who was not even a resident of the country, the
chairman of the biggest political party of Pakistan.
The malaise of dynasty
is not limited to the PPP alone. If Asfandyar Wali is a third
generation ANP leader, then Mian Nawaz Sharif is preparing ground to
bring in his daughter, Maryam Nawaz , to counter the threat of the PTI
and help his party shed the old fuddy-duddy image. And Imran Khan is
probably planning to challenge the Election Commission on the issue of
the enforcement of the law barring dual nationality holders from
contesting elections, to ensure that his progeny be able to do the
requisite politicking when their time comes.
Heaping scorn on a malicious dead dictator is fine, but ridiculing an
entire nation for their collective bad fortune is just in bad taste. I
wish Pakistanis had shown a bigger heart and extended compassion to the
North Koreans. After all, who else should have been able to empathise
with them like us?
Originally published in The Express Tribune.
2 comments:
if only Pakistanis realize how much they are made fun of
I remember you wrote something similar about Iran a few years back...!
Yaar wasay Kim ki zaidatiyon kay baad uspay hasna banta hai!?
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