Thursday, April 18, 2024
06:08 AM (GMT +5)

Go Back   CSS Forums > General > News & Articles > The Express Tribune

Reply Share Thread: Submit Thread to Facebook Facebook     Submit Thread to Twitter Twitter     Submit Thread to Google+ Google+    
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread
  #1  
Old Sunday, March 09, 2014
Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2013
Location: pure homeland
Posts: 42
Thanks: 38
Thanked 11 Times in 7 Posts
jahanzaib khan kakar is on a distinguished road
Post The great upheavals

By Anwer Mooraj
Published: March 9, 2014
anwer.mooraj@tribune.com.pk

In 2010, it was the Arab Spring, morning, noon and night on the telly, in glorious colour. This was the Great Uprising. The Maghreb would never again be the same. Tunisia, Libya, Yemen, Algeria, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Morocco and Sudan, all countries with majority Muslim populations, caught in the whirlpool of revolt, whose eddies can still be seen four years later. It was almost as if some mysterious power or force imbued with a desire to spawn a movement of political rectitude had set off the hurricane. And while the new wave swept the Middle East and North Africa, the West sat by quietly, plotting and planning, listening to the throbbing engine of the drama, watching each move with caution.

Then it was Egypt, morning noon and night on the telly. Egypt, one of the world’s oldest civilisations, land of the Pharaohs and their monuments, where Cleopatra once seduced the greatest of all Roman emperors; and where the priests wrote their memoirs on papyrus, was being torn apart. This was a powerful rebellion, a major upheaval. The cameras were permanently fixed on Tahrir Square in Cairo. President Mubarak stood firm. The opposition stood firm. The battle lines were drawn. The military got into the act. There was bloodshed. The air force strafed civilians. More bloodshed. Bodies were strewn everywhere. It looked like a bizarre scene from an old Hammer-horror Gothic movie. Right?

photo 1_zps9a7350c1.jpg

Then it was Syria, morning, noon and night on the telly. Syria, once a land of great learning and culture, turned into a fierce battlefield where the atrocities on both sides had a freshly minted terror. In the terminology familiar to the former Republican president of the United States, Bashar alAssad was the bad guy and the rebels were the good guys. Most of the broadcasts had a potato famine of a script, dumbly repetitive, relentlessly tedious. And then… a strange thing happened. Christiane Amanpour, the star of CNN, who has an enormous appetite for facts, discovered that some of the Syrian women who had crossed the border and sought refuge in Jordan were being kidnapped at their shelters and ended up in brothels. Amanpour was horrified. And rightly so. And so were a hell of a lot of journalists in Russia, Iran, the United States and Europe. It suddenly dawned on everybody that the rebels weren’t exactly boy scouts with pop guns playing cops and robbers. Right?

And now it is the Crimea, morning, noon and night on the telly. This time, it is Vladimir Putin who is being portrayed by the Western media as the bad guy. In 1939, when Adolf Hitler tried to reunite ethnic Germans in East Prussia with their western brethren, who were separated by Danzig and the Polish Corridor, it was regarded as an act of nationalism. Right? And in 1982, when Argentine forces occupied the Falkland Islands in the South Atlantic, Margaret Thatcher, the Iron Lady of British politics, sent a naval task force to get the dagos out — because she was protecting the rights of citizens loyal to the Crown. Right? But when Vladimir Putin wants to protect ethnic Russians in Crimea, he is not being allowed to do so. Right? It’s finally come down to the judgment of Thrasymachus in the Republic. Might is right. And justice is the interest of the stronger.

Published in The Express Tribune, March 9th, 2014.
Reply With Quote
Reply

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Francis Bacon Essays zohaib Essays 63 Wednesday, March 28, 2012 06:54 PM
Facts Zulfiqar Shah General Knowledge, Quizzes, IQ Tests 0 Tuesday, June 28, 2011 10:55 AM
Life of Muhammad (S.A.W.S.) zuhaib amed Islamic History & Culture 0 Thursday, April 29, 2010 07:20 PM
Solved Version of Gernal Knolwedge & Every Day Science Abdul Salam Khan General Science & Ability 0 Wednesday, November 08, 2006 05:16 PM


CSS Forum on Facebook Follow CSS Forum on Twitter

Disclaimer: All messages made available as part of this discussion group (including any bulletin boards and chat rooms) and any opinions, advice, statements or other information contained in any messages posted or transmitted by any third party are the responsibility of the author of that message and not of CSSForum.com.pk (unless CSSForum.com.pk is specifically identified as the author of the message). The fact that a particular message is posted on or transmitted using this web site does not mean that CSSForum has endorsed that message in any way or verified the accuracy, completeness or usefulness of any message. We encourage visitors to the forum to report any objectionable message in site feedback. This forum is not monitored 24/7.

Sponsors: ArgusVision   vBulletin, Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.