Showing posts with label KP. Show all posts
Showing posts with label KP. Show all posts

Friday, October 10, 2014

PTI Government Fails to Stop Wildlife Smuggling.


K-P fails to take steps to
control illegal trade

The Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa (K-P) wildlifedepartment has failed to take
steps to control the illegal trade
of birds and other animals across
the province.
Leopard geckos, black scorpions,
turtles, tuatara and myna birds are
just a few of the animals that are
being poached from K-P, they are
then being traded illegally not only
in the province but throughout the
country and some are even being
smuggled out of it.
Like in all other provinces, the
black scorpion and the gecko have
been pushed to extinction by the
greed of poachers but it is the
province’s birds that are suffering
the most at their hands.
The trade is at its peak but arrests
and other measures by wildlife
officials is limited to vendors who
sells myna, parrots and other
colourful birds without obtaining
licences to do so. “We are poor
people and this is the only way we
can make a living,” justified
Bahadur Khan, who was arrested
by wildlife officials for hunting
down dozens of Myna birds.
Sardar Muhammad Khan, who also
illegally hunts and trades valuable
birds, told The Express Tribune that
almost every bird they catch has a
market. The hunting of such birds
is banned by the K-P government
but due to inaction and lack of
deterrents, the hunting continues,
from Chitral to Peshawar.
Choos Kata is one of the rare birds
being hunted in Chitral’s Shali and
Ayoun areas and can fetch
between Rs40,000 and Rs50,000.
The terinaak, is sold for Rs10,000,
while the Choora goes for up to
Rs20,000. However, the most
expensive of them all is the Bari
Surkh, with a single one being sold
for between Rs5 million and Rs6
million. The Bari Surkh is usually
smuggled to Arab countries as few
local buyers can afford it.
However, catching these birds is
not easy, especially as they become
increasingly rare. “We begin the
hunting season at the start of
October and it goes till the end of
December but we are only able to
hunt down 50 to 55 birds,” said a
poacher. “Some of these birds die
while they are being transported in
sacks to other cities so that’s even
fewer birds that we are able to
sell.”
Not all animals are exported
though. The sekar and the
peregrine falcon are being
smuggled into the province from
all over the world, despite their
trade being banned in the entire
country, according to divisional
forest officer Niaz Muhammad.
While proper data on wildlife is
lacking, Muhammad claimed that
there are 455 different species of
birds in the province, out of which
around a dozen are considered
rare.

Published in The Express Tribune,
October 10 th, 2014.

Source: http://tribune.com.pk/story/773013/k-p-fails-to-take-steps-to-control-illegal-trade/

Sunday, September 21, 2014

Collective Amnesia and Apathy

A scene from Gabriel Garcia Marquez’s Nobel Prize winning novel, One Hundred Years of Solitude, has vaguely remained my memory for a long time. The scene is about a gun battle  in 1967 between liberals and conservatives in Macondo city. The conservatives, being in power, have all the state resources to construct and disseminate propaganda. Leader and commander of the liberal force gets seriously injured and is left dying in pool of blood, perceived as dead after his force is defeated. Early next morning when the Colonel comes to consciousness, he is taken aback by the fact that there are no traces of a ferocious gun battle in the main square of the city. While moving to his house, he keeps asking about the gun battle last night but nobody in the city seems to be aware of the incident. The Colonel, severely injured, wishes to lose his memory but of no avail while on the other hand people around him start doubting him to have lost his mind . The people of the town keep arguing with each other regarding the claims of the Colonel while the Colonel himself starts showing signs of abnormality. The era in the novel seems to depict political and ideological wars in 17th and 18th Century Europe.
Since then , states around the globe have achieved sophisticated techniques to monopolize construction and dissemination of political and security narratives. The narratives mostly pertain to the prolonging of political arrangements to keep wielding, using and distributing power.
The events in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, a north western province of Pakistan, and Federally Administered Tribal Areas of Pakistan (FATA) in the last three weeks provide an interesting case study as to how narratives are constructed, used, and disseminated through media that sideline the issues having direct bearing on the common masses.
On July 26 2013, twin blasts in Parachinar (Headquarters of Kurrum Agency) left almost 57 dead and 167 critically injured1.The locals on the other day expressed their emotions:
Hussain said almost all the dead and wounded were Shias. Moreover, Ali said at the time of the explosion the market was full of Shias, who were buying items for their evening meal that breaks the daytime fast during the holy month of Ramazan. ”We demand protection. We request the government to take action against those who routinely kill our people,” he told The Associated Press. One of the blasts was carried out by a suicide bomber while the other might have been a planted one, Political Agent Riaz Mehsud said.[2]
Target killing of Peace Committees, police officials and Shias has remained a routine matter in the meanwhile. On August 2, two policemen and a House Station Officer (SHO) were shot dead in Daudzai in the suburbs of Peshawar.[3] A member of the Peace Committee was shot dead in Kabal Tehsil of Swat distrct on July 24 2013.[4] These are just two of the dozens acts of target killings that continue in Peshawar and other parts of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa unabattedly.
On July 30, “As many as 243 prisoners escaped as militants carrying heavy weapons stormed Dera Ismail Khan’s Central Jail, holding as many as 5,000 prisoners including 250 inmates belonging to various banned outfits here on late Monday night, Geo News reported.”[5]
These unfortunate events would have been considered as part of the war the militant network has launched against the state and society of Pakistan, especially Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and FATA, had both the state and private electronic and print media of Pakistan not melted the story through other high profile stories that have little or no direct bearing on the citizens. Let me count the events that were hyped by media in the meanwhile which intentionally or unintentionally sidelined the terror events mentioned above.
A controversy on presidential election that was destined to be won by PML-N made banner headlines in print media and occupied more than 70% of time in electronic media which successfully marginalized killings in Parachinar.
After section of media started reporting target killings, news of the resignation of the Chief Election Commissioner of Pakistan started doing the rounds. The stories of target killings thus relegated to cold storage by mainstream media.
As if it were not enough, when media started analyzing various aspects of the DI Khan jailbreak, another high profile issue occupied almost the whole space of print and electronic media. Supreme Court of Pakistan issued a show cause notice to Chairman Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI), Imran Khan. This issue successfully engaged print media, electronic media and social media in a way unprecedented in this part of the world.
Is it demand of the consumers for a story as some media exponents would argue or depiction of a stark reality of the political economy of Pakistan? Is it information, education and entertainment as classical journalism envisages or monopoly on construction, distribution and dissemination of narratives that are related to power? Does this phenomenon indicate thirst for information by the common masses or does this signify hold of power by the political, corporate, and military and intelligence elite and urban middle classes in the state structures of Pakistan?
Academia in this part of the world has so far failed to analyze the above questions that have close relationship with the political economy of the state of Pakistan for three reasons besides lethargy. Firstly, most of the academia that resides in the urban centers has a share in the monopoly of the narratives and hence has some share in the hold of power by the elite and urban middle classes. Secondly, the overbearing state institutions on the one hand and the militant network on the other hand have successfully permeated fear with respect to evidence based analysis that might lead to a difference of opinion with respect to popular narratives. Thirdly, socio-cultural space for the dissenting narratives has been reduced to the extent that academia might not lay its hands on something that might touch the boundaries of non-conformism.

(The writer is a Peshawar based political analyst. Email: khadimhussain565@gmail.com , twitter@khadimhussain4