Friday, July 05, 2024

PAKISTAN

RIGHTS: NO COUNTRY FOR POOR ANIMALS
Published June 30, 2024
DAWN
The mutilated camel at the time of its arrival at an animal shelter in Karachi

On the weekend before Eidul Azha, the festival of sacrifice, a video surfaced on social media of a camel with one of its forelegs chopped off.

The camel had wandered on to the land of a local landlord, who is believed to have ordered the barbaric act as a way to teach a lesson to its owner. The video of the maimed animal triggered a widespread outcry, forcing the police in Sindh’s Sanghar district to take action against those involved.

It also saw various animal rescue organisations spring into action, with the camel shifted to one shelter in Karachi, and efforts said to be afoot to get it a prosthetic limb.
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The camel’s fate was still better than that of a donkey in Hyderabad, who was so badly beaten by its owner, it ended up with multiple fractures. The hapless equine died at a shelter in Karachi last week.


The situation is worse for stray animals, often targeted with mass cullings and poisoning, including by ‘concerned’ neighbours and systemically by various city departments, under the guise of “keeping the streets safe for pedestrians.”

The barbaric mutilation of a camel a few weeks ago shows that animal welfare remains an afterthought in Pakistan, with outdated laws no deterrent against wanton acts of cruelty

The last such mass culling drive was carried out by a municipal department in Karachi last year. But several activists, including Ayesha Chundrigar — who runs the eponymously-named animal rescue service and shelter in Karachi — says her shelter continues to receive and treat stray dogs that have been poisoned, and there are reports of dogs being poisoned across the country.

The social media feed of her shelter, as well as that of dozens of others that have popped up over the last several years, are filled with horrific stories of animals being mistreated.

From stray dogs being pelted with stones and puppies tossed from rooftops, to cats and kittens being tortured, there is ample evidence of this wanton violence towards voiceless animals in Pakistani society. Some of those responsible for this callousness are children.

But we don’t need social media for that reminder. One look at the condition of the street animals in Pakistan is enough. Most of these animals are insufficiently fed, often brutally treated, unkempt and injured.

LEGAL LABYRINTH

In Pakistan, the state does not have any animal welfare policy or service in place, with the sterilisation and vaccination campaigns advocated by animal rights activists extremely sporadic. The cause of animal welfare is being championed primarily by private individuals and collectives.

One such effort is a Facebook page, called ‘Lost And Found Pets & Helping Desk Pakistan.’ It serves three functions: to unite lost pets with their owners, to report any case of animals requiring rescue, and to spread awareness on animal welfare.

Through their supporters, such digital initiatives create a snowball effect on news regarding animal cruelty, which is then covered by the national media and, as a result, the authorities are compelled to take action.

But it’s a tall order, considering Pakistan’s limited and outdated laws on preventing animal cruelty, combined with a state apparatus that is often more than willing to collude with the perpetrators of such violence.

This is visible in the case of the mutilated camel, with the owner telling the judicial magistrate in Sanghar that the police were trying to save the main suspect and had not even included his name in the first information report (FIR).

The most prominent law for animal protection is the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act (1890), a law inherited from the pre-Partition British era. The parameters within which the act is defined are limited in scope and lack recent shifts in understanding of animal welfare.
The camel in its enclosure at the shelter | CDRS Benji Project

For instance, the law defines animals as “domestic” or “captured”. This excludes birds and strays as well as wildlife, although provinces have specific laws pertaining to that. Moreover, the law identifies penalties for cruelty to animals, such as overworking, beating or subjecting the animal to unnecessary pain.

But these terms are vaguely defined, points out Altamush Saeed, who did his masters in animal law from the US. “There is no baseline for ‘unnecessary pain’, so it cannot be determined or the law implemented,” he tells Eos.

The federal government did pass a law in 2018, increasing the fines for animal cruelty. It increased the maximum fine to Rs100,000 for animal cruelty, which had remained at the Rs50 level since the law was first passed in 1890, for first-time offenders. The minimum fine was raised to Rs10,000. There was a similar increase in fines for other offences against animals.

However, the law is only applicable in the federal capital, and does not extend to the rest of Pakistan. This is because animal welfare became a provincial subject after the 18th Amendment, and provinces are required to enact their own laws.

That is yet to happen, resulting in punishment for offences against animals in the rest of Pakistan staying the same as they were under the 1890 law.

One fillip for animal activists was when, in April 2020, the Islamabad High Court affirmed that animals have legal rights under the Constitution of Pakistan. The court also ordered shut a zoo in Islamabad, with the animals moved to sanctuaries.

IN NEED OF SAFE HAVENS

Activists point out that while street animals have it tough, even domestic pets can share the same fate at the hands of humans. There are many stories of pets abandoned by their human families. One such sad story is of a Persian cat that arrived at a shelter in Lahore. The cat was abandoned by its human family after it developed urinary blockage and kidney stones.

But managing a shelter and a rescue service is costly, as the animals require food, medical attention and safe spaces. Most shelters have limited funds, though they have adopted novel crowdsourcing techniques, such as sponsor-a-pet programmes.

But even so, raising resources can be a challenge.

Nadia Hassan, who runs a shelter and rescue service in Lahore, tells Eos that their plans depend on such funds and it becomes a problem when people don’t provide the funds they have promised.

She says, sometimes, people even refuse to wait with an injured animal after calling their rescue service. “They think they have done their moral duty.”

With limited staff and often reliant on volunteers, such shelters and rescue services are also sometimes accused of delayed responses to the donors, who have the right to follow up with these organisations. There have also been complaints, including against prominent shelters, of not permitting visitors or taking in more animals because of space constraints.

Sarah Jahangir, who runs the shelter where the maimed camel is under treatment, says people tend to get excitable around the animals, when they need to stay calm, which could be one reason for shelters keeping visitors to a minimum. Her shelter in Karachi, she tells Eos, allows visits on only two days in a week.

Similarly, she says it’s impossible for rescue services to take in all the animals, as they need space and money, which are already stretched.

The shelter that Sarah runs is spread over two acres and employs 21 people, with monthly operational costs around two million rupees. “We raise half of that amount through our sponsor-a-pet programme, and for the rest, we have to literally beg,” she says.

Despite the challenges, Sarah says they continue to take in more animals. For her, kindness towards animals is not only for their welfare, but also a reflection of our values as a society.

PSYCHOLOGICAL CORRELATION

There is ample research which shows that abnormal behaviour towards animals requires immediate attention, especially from clinicians. Studies suggest that there may be links between animal cruelty and later aggression or violence towards humans, as well as other problematic behaviours.

One such research, conducted by Laura Wauthier of the University of Edinburgh in Scotland, states that animal cruelty in children or adolescents can be an early indicator of potential future violent behaviour.

Alternatively, there is an equally copious amount of scientific literature which consistently shows that animals have a profound and positive impact on human life, enhancing physical health, mental well-being and social interactions, and providing therapeutic benefits.

The integration of animals into various aspects of human life, from healthcare to social support, underscores their invaluable role in promoting overall health and well-being in society.

The writer is an assistant professor at the School of Communication Studies of the University of Punjab in Lahore


Published in Dawn, EOS, June 30th, 2024


Famine, Affluence, and Morality. Peter Singer. Philosophy and Public Affairs, vol. 1, no. 1 (Spring 1972), pp. 229-243 [revised edition]. As I write this, in ...


* In TOM REGAN & PETER SINGER (eds.), Animal Rights and Human Obligations. New Jersey: Prentice-Hall, 1989, pp. 148-. 162. Page 2. men are; dogs, on the other ...

That's an important step forward, and a sign that over the next forty years we may see even bigger changes in the ways we treat animals. Peter Singer. February ...

In Practical Ethics, Peter Singer argues that ethics is not "an ideal system which is all very noble in theory but no good in practice." 1 Singer identifies ...

Beasts of. Burden. Capitalism · Animals. Communism as on ent ons. s a een ree. Page 2. Beasts of Burden: Capitalism - Animals -. Communism. Published October ...

Nov 18, 2005 ... Beasts of Burden forces to rethink the whole "primitivist" debate. ... Gilles Dauvé- Letter on animal liberation.pdf (316.85 KB). primitivism ..




MEDIA: ASSANGE’S VICTORY, BUT WITH A CAVEAT
THE CONVERSATI0N
Published June 30, 2024
Wikileaks founder Julian Assange gave two thumbs up as he stepped off the plane to applause in Canberra on Wednesday night | AFP

Julian Assange is out of prison, after agreeing to plead guilty to violating the US Espionage Act. [At the time of this writing,] he is expected to be freed after appearing in a US courtroom on the Northern Mariana Islands.


It is worth pausing for a moment to consider all that Assange has been through, and to pop a bottle of champagne to celebrate his release.

He spent 1,901 days in a small cell in Britain’s notorious Belmarsh Prison and, according to WikiLeaks, was “isolated 23 hours a day.”

I know — from first-hand experience — what imprisonment feels like. Make no mistake. Assange might not have been beaten up or had his fingernails ripped out, but extended confinement with an uncertain future is its own particular kind of excruciating torture.


The crushing burden of incarceration

Belmarsh came after Assange had already spent almost seven years seeking asylum in the Ecuadorian embassy in London.

He went there to evade extradition to Sweden, as part of a rape investigation he said was trumped up, and included the possibility of being sent on to the United States to face allegations of espionage.


The Wikileaks founder is finally free, but his ordeal is likely to have a chilling impact on press freedom and public-interest journalism

When Ecuador eventually rescinded his asylum claim in 2019, he was dragged out of the embassy and arrested by UK police for absconding from bail.

The US wanted to extradite him for alleged conspiracy to commit computer intrusion, and then 17 counts of espionage. Those charges, his supporters said, included the possibility of life behind bars.

My own ordeal in Egypt, where I was imprisoned on terrorism charges in 2014–15, was nothing compared to Assange’s, but it was more than enough to understand the crushing mental and physical burden that incarceration imposes on inmates.

And I also understand the weird blend of elation, confusion and disorientation that sudden release brings. Assange’s journey home will be much longer than his flight back to Australia.


While it is impossible to quantify the number of stories not told, it is hard to imagine it hasn’t frightened off potential whistleblowers and reporters. It also leaves open the question of precedent. It is still not clear whether future governments might be able to use Assange’s guilty plea as a way of using the Espionage Act to go after uncomfortable journalism.

A serious chilling effect on public-interest journalism

But Assange’s release does not end the questions this whole saga raised in the first place.

It began when his company, WikiLeaks, published a series of documents, exposing evidence of war crimes and abuses by the US government in Iraq and Afghanistan.

WikiLeaks was doing what the First Amendment to the US Constitution was designed to achieve. It guarantees freedom of speech and press freedom, and in the process, it grants people the right to speak out against abuses of government authority.

That is a vitally important check on the awesome power that governments wield, and WikiLeaks should be celebrated for what it exposed.

Like many others, I believe Julian Assange should never have been charged with espionage.

The Obama administration was among the most aggressive in US history in going after journalists’ sources who leaked embarrassing government information. Yet in 2013, Obama’s Justice Department decided against prosecuting Assange.

Justice Department officials realised they couldn’t do it without setting a precedent that would force them to also go after established news organisations, like the New York Times and Washington Post.

This case has undeniably had a serious chilling effect on public-interest journalism, and sends a terrifying message to any sources sitting on evidence of abuses by the government and its agencies.

While it is impossible to quantify the number of stories not told, it is hard to imagine it hasn’t frightened off potential whistleblowers and reporters.

It also leaves open the question of precedent. It is still not clear whether future governments might be able to use Assange’s guilty plea as a way of using the Espionage Act to go after uncomfortable journalism.

As we have seen in the past, leaders with an authoritarian streak tend to use every lever available to control the flow of information, and that must surely worry anyone who believes in the corrective power of a free press.

Questions about journalism

Assange has been hailed by his supporters as a “Walkley Award-winning journalist.” His gong is certainly prestigious and worth celebrating, but it is also important to recognise the award was for his “Outstanding Contribution to Journalism.”

I got the same award in 2014. I am very proud of that. I got it not for my journalism, but for my stand on press freedom while I was imprisoned. Assange

rightly got his for the role WikiLeaks played in supplying journalists with a steady stream of incredibly valuable documents.

The distinction is important, because of the particular role journalism plays in our democracy, elevating it beyond freedom of speech. Journalism comes with the responsibility to process and present information in line with a set of ethical and professional standards.

I don’t believe WikiLeaks met that standard; in releasing raw, unredacted and unprocessed information online, it posed enormous risks for people in the field, including sources.

This is not to diminish the importance or value of what WikiLeaks exposed. Australia’s union for journalists, the Media, Entertainment and Arts Alliance, has rightly described this case as “one of the darkest periods in the history of media freedom.”

And it will undoubtedly cast a long shadow across public-interest journalism. But for now, we should all celebrate the release of a man who has suffered enormously for exposing the truth of abuses of power.

The writer is professor of journalism at Macquarie University in Australia and the executive director of the advocacy group, the Alliance for Journalists’ Freedom

Republished from The Conversation

Published in Dawn, EOS, June 30th, 2024




King Trump


Rafia Zakaria 
Published July 3, 2024
DAWN


IF last week’s debate was not victory enough for former president Donald Trump, he had another windfall land in his lap this Monday. On July 1, 2024, the US supreme court issued its decision, stating that the former president enjoyed presidential immunity for official acts during his term in office. The supreme court remanded the case back to the trial court for a decision on what the ‘official acts’ would be.

The stunning decision took a very broad interpretation of immunity, including the president telling his own Department of Justice to prosecute political opponents and other people he did not like. It also follows that some of Trump’s acts on Jan 6, which included refusals to call the National Guard and other law-enforcement against the protesters, could be immune from prosecution if they fall under official acts.

The political scene in the US was already in disarray since President Joe Biden’s dismal debate performance last Thursday. For those who did not watch the event, it showed the 82-year-old Biden faltering, hesitant, pale and losing his train of thought. In sum, all the attacks that the Trump team had been making on Biden’s inability to hold office at his age were given full credence. So awful was the performance that even after the first 10 minutes were over, Democratic operatives were in a state of panic about what would happen next.

Many already began to float the possibility of an open convention in which Biden would release the delegates that have pledged support for him to be free to choose someone else as the presidential candidate. For his part, Biden issued a statement the next day that he had full intention to contest the coming election and was not considering relinquishing the nomination. This has not quelled rumours of an open convention or of everyone from Vice President Kamala Harris and Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer to Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro taking over the top slot on the ticket. These wranglings continue, with some Democratic operatives arguing that a new candidate now would be worse than Biden, and others insisting that Biden would more or less guarantee a Democratic loss.

In this maelstrom of confusion is the historic decision virtually guaranteeing that Trump reinstated in the presidency will have drastically more powers than he enjoyed in his previous term. Writing in her dissent for the minority, Justice Sonia Sotomayor said that the decision signed on by the majority had given such broad powers to the presidency that the president could order Seal Team Six to assassinate someone and be immune from prosecution if his directive could be considered an official act. She said that the decision makes a “mockery” of the precept that “no man is above the law”. “The president,” Sotomayor wrote, “is now a king”.


The US supreme court’s decision virtually guarantees that Trump reinstated in the presidency will have drastically more powers than he enjoyed in his previous term.

For her part, dissenting Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson wrote: “Even a hypothetical president who admits to having ordered the assassinations of his political rivals or critics, or one who indisputably instigates an unsuccessful coup, has a fair shot at getting immunity under the majority’s new presidential accountability model.” Basically, while everyone else in the US lives within the confines of the country’s laws, the president is going to be above the law, Brown Jackson wrote.

The majority, however, saw things differently, the notable difference being that they did not see how a president could conduct his office without having immunity for official actions even after his term as president was over.

There are wider repercussions stemming from the supreme court’s decision. On the legal front, it detracts from the legitimacy of America’s supreme court which has increasingly been attacked in recent days for harbouring political biases even as it pretends at neutrality. The fact that many of the justices in the majority were Trump appointees does not help the reputation of the courtroom, which will be scoffed at as simply doing the bidding of the party and the president that initially gave them their cushy jobs. The recent controversies regarding the political leanings of conservative justices like Samuel Alito and the long-standing accusations of political bias against him do not help the court’s failing status as a neutral arbiter.

The decision has amplified panic among the Democrats for a number of reasons. Many are now afraid that another Trump term will not be simply terrifying but also downright catastrophic, with an unhinged president using all sorts of ‘official acts’ as the basis for settling vendettas, intimidating political enemies and political score-keeping. This makes the stakes extremely high for the November election. Those asking for Biden to step aside can point to the extreme conservatism of the court and argue that other things previously thought impossible, such as a ban on birth control and in vitro fertilization, are not hard to imagine, coming from a court that is showing its extreme conservatism in this decision.

Finally, there are implications for international jurisprudence as well. Many democratic countries struggle with the issue of how to assess the criminal actions of past leaders. This decision offers a huge carte blanche saying that governance itself necessitates a level of insulation against being held accountable for one’s actions. It is particularly frightening that the decision was instigated by a case in which the then president is known to have ordered supporters to attack another democratic institution. The chief justice of the supreme court did not think so; in his opinion granting immunity was one of the ways that a country could be kept away from an endless cycle of past rulers being forced into court and being prosecuted every time a new government was elected.

The writer is an attorney teaching constitutional law and political philosophy.

rafia.zakaria@gmail.com

Published in Dawn, July 3rd, 2024
Haj and climate attributions

Ali Tauqeer Sheikh 
Published July 4, 2024 
DAWN


CLIMATE change has begun to infringe on the freedom of believers to perform Haj freely and fearlessly. The world was shocked to learn that almost 1,500 individuals died of the heat during the pilgrimage. Heatwaves everywhere in the world, as in Pakistan, have become mercilessly hotter, frequent, and longer. The developments in attributive sciences are able to clearly assign the share of climatic changes to increased temperatures and precipitation. This emerging field of inquiry has begun to guide climate adaptation, risk management, commodity price hedging, insurance, and the landscape of international climate finance.

Detection and attribution of climate change has emerged as an active area of research that uses various methods to link observed changes in climate caused by human activities. This helps determine whether human influence can be distinguished from natural weather cycles, processes and variabilities. Causation, also known as detection and attribution studies, is used to attribute trends, extreme events, impacts, and sensitivity to human-caused climate change. Several attribution techniques are applied for increasingly reliable, timely, and actionable information for climate adaptation and risk management efforts.

Almost 50 studies over the last 10 years or so by the World Weather Attribution (WWA), ClimaMeter and several others have conducted studies to ascertain whether or not climate change is altering the frequency and intensity of extreme weather events (EWEs), helping to determine how climatic changes affect specific trends. These studies can now be undertaken on an almost real-time basis.

Attributional science is now able to provide quantitative assessments of how climate change has affected the odds of similarly extreme weather occurring in the future. Quantifying can now provide scientific evidence on how the likelihood and intensity of specific EWEs has increased. WWA has, for example, found that heatwaves have become 1.2 degrees Celsius hotter than in pre-industrial times. Likewise, a study found that the 2022 heatwave in India and Pakistan was 30 times more likely due to climate change. A recent rapid assessment by ClimaMeter on the heatwave during Haj found that, without the influence of human-caused climate change, temperatures would have been 2.5°C cooler. ClimaMeter and WWAs regularly conduct rapid assessments of the role of climate change in particular EWEs.


Detection and attribution of climate change has emerged as an active area of research.

There are, however, also significant challenges and limitations. An integrated, nuanced approach is required to effectively leverage this emerging field of climate science. A careful consideration of the limitations is needed when applying attribution findings to predict and manage future climate-related risks and damage. The goal of such studies is to provide the best available science-based information to support risk management and climate adaptation. Researchers acknowledge the limitations and uncertainties in their analyses, recognising that ‘we don’t know’ or ‘no significant trend’ are valid findings, as many of the 50 studies by WWA concluded.

Some studies have used ‘source attribution’ to link climate damage to specific emitters, such as fossil fuel companies. This could potentially support liability claims and policies to hold emitters accountable. A Dutch court, for example, has recently ordered Shell to reduce emissions based on this type of attribution. As the world’s second largest oil producer, Saudi Arabia owns Aramco, which is one of the largest corporate emitters of greenhouse gas emissions. According to a report, it is reportedly responsible for more than four per cent of the world’s historical carbon emissions.

Meanwhile, the heat during this year’s Haj is directly linked to global fossil fuel burning and has affected the most vulnerable pilgrims, posing an ethical dilemma for the kingdom that is considered the home and custodian of Islam and its universal values.

Extreme event attribution can potentially be used to inform discussions around loss and damage. Attribution science can inform international policy discussions on L&D mechanisms. While researchers use rigorous methods, some uncertainty remains in precisely quantifying specific EWEs. This could limit the direct application for compensation. There are also concerns that attribution findings could be misrepresented or used for political purposes of assigning blame or liability, rather than informing constructive solutions. L&D encompasses a wide range of slow-onset changes and non-economic losses that are not always fully captured by extreme event attribution. It is argued that the slow-onset needs criteria-based approach using averages and trends, rather than relying solely on detailed singular event studies for L&D policy and finance mechanisms.

Further, uneven data quality and research infrastructure in developing countries poses challenges for applying attribution science to the L&D agenda. Attribution has played a central role in global climate negotiations since the early 1990s, but attribution science has begun to play an important role only in recent years. It is used in financing adaptation and litigation, and will underpin L&D funds. These efforts can influence the global conversation around climate justice and help integrate findings in new approaches to L&D policies and financial mechanisms. For L&D-related financing mechanisms, the methodological refinement will probably provide rapid attribution assessments, and enable a more immediate response and support in the aftermath of extreme events.

Extreme weather events are already having significant economic consequences. They damage property, critical infrastructure, impact human health and productivity, and negatively affect key economic sectors like agriculture, trade, industry, and urban planning. Indirect costs from supply chain disruptions and uncertainty are also substantial. Businesses face growing risks from damage to their facilities, supply chain disruptions and resource scarcity.

These economic impacts do not even account for non-economic losses such as biodiversity loss, or loss of cultural or religious heritage and practices. The floods in Pakistan have caused significant damage to mosques and other religious sites. The Post-Disaster Needs Assessment reported that religious sites in active use, including mosques, shrines, and dargahs were “extensively damaged” by the 2022 floods and that the “deterioration and damage to the sites will negatively affect visitor numbers”. In a similar vein, Haj is a central pillar of Islam and the pilgrimage should not become risky for our elderly parents, women and young children. ClimaMeter study should be a wake-up call, and not a harbinger of what’s to come.

The writer is an Islamabad-based climate change and sustainable development expert.

Published in Dawn, July 4th, 2024


Hot and dangerous

Aisha Khan 
Published July 3, 2024
DAWN


THE rise in mercury has a human cost. With each decade getting warmer since 1980, the risk of breaching critical tipping points is getting alarmingly closer. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change assessment reports have repeatedly reiterated the perils of crossing the 1.5 degrees Celsius threshold and issued advisories for urgent reduction in greenhouse gas emissions by 2030 to keep the planet safe. However thus far 1.5ºC has just been used as reference number to make strong political statements with very little to show for any measurable reduction in emissions at scale.

The heat this year is just a preview of what is likely to follow. Extreme events in past years and the health pandemic (Covid-19) are tangible proofs of the enormity of the crisis and its lingering effect on the economy. Other factors like biodiversity loss and climate-induced conflicts may not as yet be visibly relatable to people but are insidiously disrupting the social fabric of society.

Under the current patterns of emissions, it seems more than likely that the world is headed for 2.5 to 2.9ºC temperature increase from pre-industrial levels this century. The beginning of summer in four continents in the northern hemisphere has already scorched cities leaving millions to swelter as temperatures soar to new highs.

For vulnerable countries like Pakistan, this means high-risk scenarios and need for urgent adaptive action. The hidden cost of past emissions trapped in the atmosphere will add to the unfolding crisis. Even if global emissions peak before 2025, their long-term lingering impacts will continue to destabilise the climate, making it extremely difficult to cope with known threats and unknown risks. Fragility and crises will be the new norm as Earth heats up to challenge human actions and its impact on life systems.


The heat this year is just a preview of what is likely to follow.

In South Asia, the rising mercury is also a cryospheric crisis. The water towers that are a source of life to people from Bhutan to Afghanistan are under threat from the scorching heat. According to a report by the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development, snow levels are a fifth below normal in the Hindu Kush, Karakoram and Himalaya (HKH) region. This can result in excessive flooding initially and end with drought and desertification. Given its geography, the effect of deadly and repeated heatwaves will hit the region in multiple ways from the mountains to the coastline. As extreme heat also traps more moisture in the air, the monsoons this year are predicted to be 33 per cent more intense, amplifying the problem.

The world is on a collision trajectory with nature and time is running out for course correction. The good news is that everyone knows what needs to be done and there is still time to reset the future.

Meanwhile, the rise in atmospheric temperature will also result in a concomitant increase in heated debates over climate justice and moral mandate. Heat stress is not limited to physical effects, nor is it only about a food, water and energy crisis. It has a psychological dimension that manifests itself in behavioural change and altered response mechanism. This chain reaction is often overlooked in planning. Historically, prolonged deprivations, inequality and injustices have resulted in social upheavals and system change. A heat-induced, drought-driven response to thirst, hunger and lack of basic amenities is likely to be even more cataclysmic.

The quantitative difference in resources between the Global North and the Global South and the qualitative difference in absorptive capacities of both will set the stage for conflict and pitched battles if two issues are not addressed quickly. The first underpins the need to address climate justice and the second calls for expediting reform in climate finance. There can be no more delays or debates on these two issues if the global community is serious about keeping its climate promise. Mitigation remains the number one responsibility of high-emitting countries to save the planet and reduce hardships for the already struggling millions around the world.

The scorching heat has an added dimension of peril for Pakistan. The country adds five million people to its population each year. Under this scenario the gap between supply and demand is going to increase beyond the state’s ability to provide food, water and energy to 380m people by 2040. The spectre of shrinking resources and a burgeoning discontented youth population is something that needs to be factored into climate and human security planning.

A hot temper is a dangerous thing to deal with at a wider community scale. It is time to cool down the planet and for responsible countries to reduce emissions rapidly.

The writer is chief executive of the Civil Society Coalition for Climate Change.
aisha@csccc.org.pk

Published in Dawn, July 3rd, 2024



Heat the rich

Published July 6, 2024
DAWN


THE last time Karachi’s mortuaries ran out of space was in 2015, and frighteningly enough, for the same reason. Nine years ago, a merciless heatwave swept Karachi’s most vulnerable, and left behind over 2,000 corpses overwhelming the city’s morgues. Today, the same charities that run these morgues are making eerily similar statements as they did then. There is no more space for the dead, in a world that did nothing for them when they were still alive.

And now, the streets of Pakistan’s largest city are turning up dead bodies every day. Temperatures have soared to almost 50 degrees Celsius, with humidity levels that can render the human body’s cooling mechanisms almost entirely useless. On Monday this week, at least 59 heat-related fatalities were reported. Last week, figures as high as 568 bodies were also being bandied about. Most of the dead were homeless people. The youngest victim identified so far was 20 years old.

A probe has been launched by the National Electric Power Regulatory Authority to investigate the deaths. A report is sought from K-Electric to determine if their load-shedding schedule could be linked to some of the deaths. While it may be of some use to see if protracted power cuts are to blame, it can only tell the picture in part.

Heatstrokes are fairly treatable, if not entirely preventable. It requires access to shade, cooling, water, electrolytes, lightweight clothing, and minimising activities during the hottest parts of the day. Instinctive, straightforward instructions. The state tried to let people know. At the beginning of summer, tips and tricks to prevent heat-related illnesses were published far and wide. It’s easy enough to let people know what they need to do. It’s easier still to believe that that’s all it takes to save lives.

There are no safety nets from the heat and there is no one really questioning that absence.

Awareness campaigns are never the end. This government, that relishes publicising the fulfilling of its most menial obligations, seems to forget that often. The most marginalised groups are rarely in a position to follow public health advice, a reality check that the state urgently needs — perhaps almost as much as the victims needed its intervention. If drinking plenty of fluids was advertised, then why is access to clean drinking water a privilege and not a right? If staying in shaded areas is advised, then why are there so many people sleeping on the roads? If medical care for heat-related symptoms is perceived as unaffordable, then is hospital treatment really an option? And if physical labour is not recommended during peak heat hours, then why is the government not making modified timings compulsory for employers?

The truth is that Pakistan’s poor are despised. This disdain is enshrined in our state budgets, our social structures, the prospects for economic mobility and even in the way we advertise our products. We tax the salaried class into oblivion, make basic utilities scarcely available and charge astronomically for when they are. We pay our domestic staff what we spend on one evening out.

We lock people out of economic opportunities because their education quality and English-language proficiency is lacking. We advertise skin whiteness as an aspirational quality because dark people work in the sun, and that’s because they don’t have the choice not to. We sneer at body odour, not realising that access to clean water is a luxury.

There are no safety nets from the heat and there is no one really questioning that absence. Proximity to a life of disease and early, preventable death is determined by real estate. Faisal Edhi, who heads the Edhi Foundation, wryly pointed out that most of the bodies they are collecting come from areas with the highest load-shedding. There would be hell, worse than the Karachi heat, for K-Electric to pay if areas like Clifton and Defence faced the same degree of power cuts.

The Sindh Climate Change Policy acknowledges that “most of the province is located in the intense heat zone, which is expected to see a 4-5°C temperature increase in the 21st century, therefore the burden on human health will be immense due to heatstrokes, diarrhoea, cholera and vector-borne diseases.” It proposes a needs-assessment to support the development of “effective district-wise health, heat and disaster management plans”. There are no given timelines for this lofty goal. It also advocates the “availability of medication and clean drinking water during climatic extremes and emergencies”. There are no measures indicated as to how either will be ensured.

The Karachi Heatwave Management Plan, a reaction to the 2015 Karachi heatwave, contains detailed guidance on surveillance systems and for issuing public alerts when extreme heat is expected. How closely that’s been followed this year is either a scathing indictment of the policy itself, or the district government responsible for implementing it.

Well-designed, thoughtful, and gender-sensitive social protection programmes aimed at protecting the poorest people from extreme heat should rank highly in our lawmakers’ priorities. Considering there is no provision in our rickety public welfare infrastructure for income support for people who are unable to work normal hours or who suffer sickness due to extreme heat, it is unlikely that Karachi has seen the last of its heat-related deaths. And with climate change taking no prisoners, it is especially likely that the same crisis will unfold next summer.

On July 1, Pakistan’s chief meteorologist Dr Sardar Sarfaraz told the press that the “sea breeze has been restored and the heatwave is over”. This is obviously a welcome development for Karachi’s homeless, daily wage earners, and people who must either brave the sweltering afternoon heat or go hungry.

While there is no expectation of the government holding any sway over the weather, to patiently wait for relief from nature is not a policy.

The writer is a human rights and public advocacy expert.

X: @Rimmel_Mohydin

Published in Dawn, July 6th, 2024








Heatwaves and hormones: How climate change is taking a toll on women’s menstruation cycles

Research shows menstruation is either delayed or occurs much earlier than expected in countries most vulnerable to climate change.
Published July 3, 2024


My sister got her first period at the tender age of seven and a half. Not prepared for the pain that comes with menstruation, the mental and physical exhaustion took the best of her. A year later, her period mysteriously stopped and never occurred again until the age of 12.

Menarche, the first menstrual period in a female adolescent, usually occurs between ages 10 and 16, with an average onset of 12.4 years. It often happens unexpectedly and is typically painless. However, the National Institute of Health (NIH) has recently found that menstruation is either delayed or occurs much earlier than expected in countries most vulnerable to climate change.

Pakistan is among the top-ranking countries that are bearing the brunt of this global crisis. Over the past 50 years, the country’s annual mean temperature has risen by about 0.5°C, with the number of heatwaves increasing nearly five-fold.

In May 2022, when temperatures across the country broke a 60-year record, 16-year-old Fariha Atiq — who started menstruating at the age of nine — witnessed possibly the worst period of her life.

“I was completely unequipped to deal with my period. Somehow I coped with it, but as time passed, the seasonal changes worsened my cramps. I remember in the summer of 2022, from April to August I couldn’t move my legs during my menstrual cycle,” she told Dawn.com.

Fariha’s mother, Mrs Atiq, took her to various gynaecologists but all of them described what the teenager was experiencing as ‘normal’, which was far from the pain she endured. Mild to moderate pain before and during menstruation is typical, but severe cramps can stem from various factors.

Mrs Atiq continued her search for a gynaecologist who could ascertain the reason for her daughter’s pain. Eventually, she found Dr Junaid Ansari, an obstetrics expert at Abbasi Shaheed Hospital, Karachi. He explained that the pain was caused by elevated levels of cortisol — a stress hormone influenced by temperature.

Cortisol increases with rising temperatures, contributing to dysmenorrhea, which nearly immobilised the teenager two years back.
Link between hormones and rising temperatures

For most women, menstruation is typically ‘painless’; some, however, experience severe cramps. This is a symptom of dysmenorrhea — pain during the menstrual cycle — and occurs due to the release of cortisol.

Cortisol is a hormone that is released during stressful situations and plays several roles in the female anatomy. It regulates blood sugar levels, metabolism, and blood pressure, and acts as an anti-inflammatory agent. Moreover, the hormone influences the menstrual cycle and prepares the body for pregnancy.

“The primary cause of a prolonged or delayed period can be the release of cortisol, which changes from season to season. For example, in winter, the release is higher, which disrupts the cycle,” Dr Ansari explained to Dawn.com.

The doctor highlighted, however, that he had observed the hormone peak during summers due to intense heat. “Very recently, I came across a 12-year-old girl with a decent body mass index, who wasn’t able to move due to extreme cramps, that too during May and July,” he shared.

“After recommending a cortisol blood test, we discovered that her cortisol level was 30 mcg/dL, significantly above the normal range of 14-20 mcg/dL for someone her age. We opted to monitor the levels and were surprised to find them returning to normal by the end of August following rainfall.

“While I continue my research, I am convinced that severe climate change is causing disruptions in menstrual cycles,” Dr Ansari added.

Extreme stress can disrupt the working of glands that control hormones such as cortisol and are responsible for the release of oestrogen needed for female reproductive characteristics.

Researchers at Poznan University of Medical Sciences in Poland have identified seasonal patterns in cortisol levels among female medical students. The study involved testing students twice in winter and twice in summer, with saliva samples collected every two hours over 24-hour periods to measure cortisol and inflammation markers.

Participants also completed lifestyle questionnaires detailing their sleep habits, diet, and physical activity levels. Unlike previous studies conducted in varied home environments, this research found higher cortisol levels during the summer sessions, while inflammation levels remained consistent across seasons. This further strengthens the argument that rising temperature has an impact on menstrual cycles.
(Un)common conditions

Contrary to popular opinion, dysmenorrhea is not a common condition.

“Most girls who come to me with cases of severe cramps are told by gynaecologists that cramps are normal, which is not true,” Dr Asifa Sofia of the Abbasi Shaheed Hospital told Dawn.com.

“This condition has developed in the last five years, and most patients I attend, the girls go through a painful period through winter,” she said.

Primary dysmenorrhea, the doctor explained, causes pain before and during menstruation. On the other hand, periods that become painful in the later stages could indicate secondary dysmenorrhea, which is often linked to conditions such as endometriosis or uterine fibroids that affect the uterus or pelvic organs.

“This usually occurs due to hormonal changes,” she highlighted, adding that painful periods and disruptions in blood flow were directly connected to erratic weather patterns in the region.

“I work with women from both urban and rural areas. One thing I have observed, which is a common pattern, is that with fluctuating temperatures, the sizes of follicles are affected, which in turn impacts the oestrogen levels,” Dr Sofia said.

The follicle is a small, fluid-filled sac in the ovary that contains one immature egg. Disruptions in size can alter hormones that regulate puberty, menstrual cycle, pregnancy, bone strength and other functions of the female body.

Sabiha, one of Dr Sofia’s patients from Thar, is being treated for an irregular period cycle. In May 2021, she started experiencing severe abdominal pain during menstruation. Like several other women, the 24-year-old initially brushed off the pain until one day, while working around the house, she fainted.

In Thar, May and June mark the hottest months of the year with temperatures reaching up to 122°F (50 °C).

“After that fall, my period has never been normal. I either bleed for 12 days straight or I don’t bleed at all. Irrespective of that, the pain stays the same,” she said. When asked if she had experienced such cramps before she began menstruating, Sabiha replied in the negative.

Sabiha is one such case. Dr Sofia told Dawn.com that she had treated patients after the 2022 floods whose period cycles took a hit from the massive disaster. “Today, even the slightest change in temperatures either alters their follicle size or their oestrogen levels which is alarming,” she pointed out.
Migration and displacement

“My period had always been regular until floods hit my town … suddenly, I started bleeding on random days,” Geetanjali, a resident of Balochistan’s Nasirabad district, recounted.

“I would not get periods for months, and then suddenly I would start bleeding out of nowhere,” said the 25-year-old. “Some days, the bleeding would be so bad and at other times it would just be a drop.”

These disruptions have taken a toll on Geetanjali’s physical health; she has lost 25 kilogrammes in the last three months.


Climate change triggers natural disasters, leading to mass migration which contributes to disturbance in the menstrual cycle. When Pakistan was hit by gigantic floods two years back, women went through brutal menstruation woes, the traces of which can be seen and felt even today.

Alongside poor menstrual hygiene, the affectees were also exposed to pollutants that affected the uterus. As per a systematic review published in the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, pollutants affect the timing of menarche differently depending on the chemicals involved.

Studies have connected exposure to lead, polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), and flame retardants with delayed periods. Conversely, some toxicants such as endocrine-disrupting chemicals and the herbicide atrazine have been linked to early menarche.

PCBs were found in floodwaters heavily polluted with human and animal waste, impacting not only the onset of periods but also the shedding of the uterine lining, resulting in irregular menstrual cycles.

According to Geetanjali’s attending doctor Tahira Kashaf, the 25-year-old’s menstrual cycle had a lot to do with her sudden displacement and the stress that came with it.

“Her follicular size was affected by a high cortisol release and low oestrogen levels, leaving her body struggling with the heavy blood flow and cramps,” She said. “I’m concerned she might develop anaemia in a few days.”

The doctor added that a majority of female patients she had treated following the floods, particularly from Sindh and Balochistan, faced a similar problem.

“During a fertility cycle, when a follicle measures between 18 and 22 millimetres in diameter, it indicates rising oestrogen levels and thickening of the uterine lining. However, in the women who I treated post floods, the follicular size ranged between 9-12 millimetres, which indicated that oestrogen levels are extremely low,” Kashaf added.
Erratic patterns

In the past five years, Pakistan has experienced both intense heat and cold. Irregular periods aren’t limited to summer when temperatures rise rapidly, but can also occur in winters.

“I experienced intense cramps last year which made me scream, especially from the end of December to the middle of January,” said Arwa, 22. “I clocked my cycle and consulted a doctor, who asked me to get my melatonin checked.

“When I took the test towards the end of January, it was very low,” she recalled. Surprisingly, Arwa’s pain vanished by February, with regular menstruation cycles until April. But the pain returned in May, much more intense this time.

Aniqa Sajid, a mother of two, narrated going through a similar ordeal on the first and second days of her period.

“This is new to me because it has been happening for the last two years and it only happens during winters. Initially, it was just pain and I was able to move around, but with time … within six months it got so bad that even a couple of painkillers couldn’t help,” she said.

According to the NIH, the absence of natural sunlight during winter can disrupt serotonin and melatonin levels — which also play a part in regulating the menstrual cycle — in the body. This hormonal imbalance can lead to heavy periods. Additionally, when the temperatures decrease, blood vessels compress, leaving a narrower pathway for blood flow and contributing to heavier menstruation.

Dr Tahira Masood, a gynaecologist at the Liaquat National Hospital, also told Dawn.com that menstrual cramps can be intensified during winter.

“Dysmenorrhea is often caused by the secretion of hormone-like substances called prostaglandins. Cold weather can trigger an increase in these substances, leading to more painful cramps.

“The constriction of blood vessels in cold weather can exacerbate menstrual cramps. Many women report more severe cramps during winter, indicating that this is a common experience,” she explained.

Until a few years ago, menstruation was a taboo topic, hardly ever discussed in public. While this has improved over time, especially in urban areas, conversations on period pain and women’s health are still minimal.

As Pakistan scrambles to tackle the climate crisis, it is important to understand that this cannot be done without addressing gender equity, especially the underlying barriers that cause women to be disproportionately affected by natural disasters.

“Most women I come across have no clue that the changes they have been enduring in their menstrual cycles occur because of climate change,” Dr Tahira said, stressing the need for awareness.

She added that women’s health could not be compromised and in the long run, sustainable changes such as temperature-dependent tampons, hormonal medicines and other natural resources that keep the body running need to be normalised.


Aleezeh Fatimah is a pharmacist turned journalist. She tweets at @dalchawalorrone

Right to reproductive health

Most women in Pakistan lack the autonomy to take decisions that impact their sexual and reproductive health.
Published July 4, 2024 
DAWN


AS women, many of us have traversed through the uncomfortable changes brought on by puberty with an incomplete understanding of their meaning and consequences; we often braved, sometimes challenging, pregnancies without access to requisite information or satisfactory healthcare. Our exact experiences may have differed depending on our geographical location, income strata and ethnicity. But the absence of a rights-based discourse around our access to sexual and reproductive healthcare has been a common factor.

Women’s right to sexual and reproductive health has been recognised as a fundamental human right under the international human rights framework, and is seen as intrinsically linked to the right to life, dignity, education, information, and equality before the law.

The right to sexual and reproductive health is defined as the right to attain a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being in all matters related to the reproductive system (Plan of Action, International Conference on Population and Development). It guarantees women (and men) the freedom and autonomy to take decisions regarding her body, in particular her sexual and reproductive health, and to determine the number and spacing of children, without coercion or discrimination (General Comment No. 22, International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights; Article 16, Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women [CEDAW]). It also entitles women affordable and non-discriminatory access to healthcare facilities, services, and information on family planning and reproductive health, so as to enable full enjoyment of the right (General Comment No. 22, ICESCR).

A recent report by the UNFPA titled Interwoven Lives, Threads of Hope: Ending Inequalities in Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights (2024), paints a dismal picture of the state of sexual and reproductive health rights in Pakistan: less than 33 per cent of women have the autonomy to makes decisions regarding their sexual and reproductive health; only 52pc women are able to take decisions about their general health; and 55pc exercise decision-making powers regarding engagement in sexual intercourse. Although a significant proportion of women report the exercise of decision-making power with respect to the use of contraceptives, the contraceptive prevalence rate for married women aged 15 to 49 years stands at 40pc (with the usage of modern contraceptive methods being even lower). The maternal mortality rate in Pakistan is 154 per 100,000 births, with one woman dying every 50 minutes on account of pregnancy-related complications. It would reportedly take Pakistan 122 years to achieve zero maternal deaths and 93 years to fulfill the needs for family planning.

Most women in Pakistan lack the autonomy to take decisions that impact their sexual and reproductive health.

Most women in Pakistan then lack the autonomy to take decisions that impact their sexual and reproductive health; several do not have access to necessary information and services regarding family planning and contraceptive use; and too large a number die during childbirth.

It is worth noting that in this backdrop, a rights-based discourse around reproductive health and maternal health has gradually taken root in our jurisprudence. In Human Rights Case No. 17599/2018, the Supreme Court of Pakistan recognised that a woman’s right to well-informed and controlled pregnancies is rooted in the constitutionally recognised rights to life, equality, education, information, and due process of law, and emphasised the state’s obligation to impart sufficient information about family planning.

In a more recent case (Sabeen Asghar vs Punjab) concerning the provision of maternity leave, the Lahore High Court drew upon the international law obligations of Pakistan, including those under ICESCR and CEDAW, to conclude that “a woman’s right to safe motherhood is not only a right to health but also a right to life”, which entitles her to “necessary care to ensure … [her] safety and health during pregnancy and childbirth”. A violation of the right to safe motherhood infringes on the guarantee of equal treatment and protection of dignity of person under the Constitution of Pakistan.

This judicial articulation of a woman’s reproductive rights is centred around her experience of reproduction and child birth. The scope of sexual and reproductive rights in the international human rights framework is, however, much broader. Efforts were made in the past to imbed the entitlement to reproductive rights (as defined in CEDAW) in national-level legislation, albeit in vain.

In 2019, a draft bill on reproductive rights, was prepared with consultation of legislators, human rights activists, policy workers, lawyers and relevant government departments for promulgation in Punjab.

The proposed law — applicable to both public and private healthcare establishments — defined reproductive rights in line with international human rights law.

It obligated the state to ensure comprehensive reproductive healthcare through the provision of: accurate information and counselling on reproductive health, including age appropriate sexuality education in schools; safe and effective contraceptive methods and family planning services; safe and effective antenatal, childbirth, and postnatal care; and safe abortion, services, as permitted under the law; prevention, management, and treatment of infertility and sexually transmitted infections; development and enforcement of reproductive health manuals and protocols; and training and gender sensitisation of personnel at reproductive healthcare establishments. The proposed law set lofty objectives for the state to fulfil. It appears, however, that the proposed law was not eventually presented for promulgation.

One may ask, does the framing of women’s sexual and reproductive health as a human rights issue in judicial pronouncements or legislation have any real significance? After all, maternal morbidity, insufficient and unequal access to adequate and quality sexual and reproductive healthcare, and women’s inability to take decisions regarding their bodies are complex problems, rooted in the insufficiency of resources, lack of education, patriarchy, social taboos, political conflict(s), and skewed state priorities, which require more than judicial pronouncement or legislative recognition to be addressed.

However, conceptualising sexual and reproductive health as a fundamental human right in the law, grants it a particular sanctity and force, that commands firmer commitment from and more effective action by the state. It also allows us women the ability to hold the state accountable for its continued failure to protect and provide for our sexual and reproductive health.

The writer is a lawyer.

Published in Dawn, July 4th, 2024
Peace or weapons?

Pakistan should eliminate arms, instead of promoting them.

Naeem Sadiq 
Published July 4, 2024 
DAWN




ON Feb 28, 2013, the then interior minister Rehman Malik, in a written reply, informed the National Assembly (NA) that his ministry issued 11,776 prohibited bore arms licences in 2008; 27,551 in 2009; 5,789 in 2010; 8,369 in 2011; and 15,988 in 2012, thus empowering parliament with 69,473 prohibited bore weapon licences. A simple calculation suggests that on average every MNA got 203 prohibited bore weapon licences over a period of five years. This must be the world’s most well-armed parliament, whose assets could spark envy in any member of the National Rifle Association (NRA).

On Aug 21, 2019, the government issued SRO (1)/ 2019, lifting the ban on issuance of prohibited bore weapon licences for nine categories of individuals — the president, prime minister, Senate chairman, NA Speaker, governors, chief ministers, federal ministers, Supreme Court and high court judges. They were now free to purchase or receive as gifts lethal weapons of ‘prohibited’ bore category. The notification was objected to by a Supreme Court judge who wrote, “the judges’ code of conduct did not permit receiving such gifts. What moral authority will the government exercise in tackling the spread of weapons by encouraging the spread of yet more lethal prohibited bore weapons?”

On Sept 25, 2021, the government announced a yet more crazy and classist notification extending the list of beneficiaries of prohibited bore weapons licences to include all members of the Senate, the national and provincial assemblies, and all Grade 21 and 22 officers. Generously, it clarified that they were all entitled to not one but two prohibited bore arms licences.

In 2024, information received under the right to information law revealed that KP had issued 68,9510 arms licences in the last 10 years, while Sindh blessed its citizens with 115,467 in the same period.

Pakistan should eliminate arms, instead of promoting them.

It is beyond comprehension that a nation in such dire need of peace and tolerance would engage in such proliferation of the instruments of crime, violence and militancy. One can safely assume that every gun licence in Pakistan was issued without mandatory verification, training, background check or written test. They were either issued as an act of appeasement or through political clout, status, power or bribe. Perhaps, Pakistan could have had greater success in combating terrorism if, instead of the wishy-washy ‘20-point National Action Plan’, it had chosen just a single-point agenda of eliminating all weapons. Here is how it could still be accomplished.

The government must understand that crime and militancy in Pakistan stems from its own flawed arms-promoting policies, its legal and illegal gun-licensing facilities and its failure to monitor the sale, smuggling and spread of weapons. Arms possession must be declared as the exclusive domain of the state; no citizen, regardless of his or her status, wealth, influence or political clout, should be allowed to possess, carry, store, buy, sell or display a weapon — licensed or otherwise.

In compliance with Article 256 of the Constitution, private militias operated by militants in urban, riverine and mountain areas, regardless of their size and patrons, must be disbanded via the full might of the state. The import, sale, purchase, transportation, delivery and possession of all kinds of weapons — except those in use by law-enforcement agencies — must be banned. Issuance of all types of gun licences be banned; those already issued must be declared null and void. The discriminatory and discretionary Arms Ordinance should be struck down. Starting with unlicensed weapons, all citizens must be made to surrender their weapons through an incentivised buy-back scheme.

Private weapons ma­­­nufacturing in areas like Darra Adam Khel ought to be regulated and directed towards export rather than home consumption. The Small Arms Sur­vey (Switzerland), in its 2018 report Esti­mating Global Civi­l-ian-Held Firearms Numbers, estimates 43.9 million guns held by civilians in Pakistan — far more than the combined number held by all the law-enforcing organisations of the country.

We could learn much about gun control from Australia, the UK, New Zealand, Japan, China and Vietnam, which have successfully and smartly tackled this menace. On the other hand, successive Pakistani governments have contributed actively to violence and militancy via the issuance of uncontrolled gun licences, creating special provisions of prohibited bore arms for its militant elite (violative of Articles 25 and 256), using weapons as an instrument of political bribe and neglecting the rampant smuggling and sale of illegal arms. It has two choices: pursue peace and progress or remain embroiled in the world of militancy and armed militias. It would do well to log out of its NRA mindset.

The writer is an industrial engineer and a volunteer social activist.

Published in Dawn, July 4th, 2024
PAKISTAN

The privacy myth

Farieha Aziz
Published July 6, 2024
DAWN


A RECENT order by the Islamabad High Court (IHC) in the audio leaks case now establishes on record what was surmised all along: no warrant has ever been sought under the Investigation for Fair Trial Act, 2013, for surveillance. This is important because it goes to the heart of lawmaking in an environment where draconian laws are routinely enacted and overbroad powers are written into them for the executive with the ruse of judicial oversight presented as an adequate safeguard. The executive overreaches and no ‘safeguard’ in the law prevents it from doing so in practice, absent a rule of law environment and any enforcement of existing checks in the law and Constitution.

Here’s a law that was presented as a check on the executive’s surveillance powers. Surveillance of citizens is the norm and the existence of a legal framework to check this practice has proven to be wholly ineffective. The fact that no warrant has been obtained in 11 years, points to a culture of impunity where the executive, in all these years, has felt brazen enough to carry out surveillance and not fulfil legal requirements — because who is going to hold them to account for it?

Who allows the executive to get away with excesses if not the judiciary? Courts are not in the habit of holding the executive to account — there are very few exceptions — especially when it’s about access to citizens’ data and devices for ‘investigation’ or ‘national security’.

Everyone rides on the assumption that the executive must and can conduct surveillance or access data. Lawful or not, this practice has been normalised. When was the last time that a warrant for search and seizure, disclosure of content data or court permission for real-time collection and recording of data under the Prevention of Electronic Crimes Act, 2016, was sought? Yet, the seizing of devices, accessing data on them and admission of such ‘evidence’ in court is a common practice. The doctrine of necessity mostly prevails. Requirements in the law for warrants, due process, reasoned orders, are ignored as though these are mere asides. Why then would the executive feel compelled to abide by checks which the judiciary itself does not enforce?

Various filtering and surveillance technology has been purchased and put to use in Pakistan.

But even if warrants are sought, can they check technology which monitors in real-time and at scale? Such is the insidious nature of technology, once procured and operationalised, how exactly will warrants and judicial oversight apply? Who is checking on a minute-by-minute basis, who is being surveilled, to what degree and what end? What capacity do courts have to understand the tech involved and its implications on privacy? What on-paper guardrails can possibly extend to such technology?

The ‘Lawful’ Intercept Management System, which is rightly referred to as a surveillance centre in the IHC order, is not shocking because everyone knows this is happening. Back in 2013, in a hearing before the Sindh High Court, a lawyer representing a telco insisted before the bench that systems had been deployed and data was handed over to the government, so why did they block their services?

But who uses an open line to speak if they can avoid it? SMSes are obsolete for day-to-day communication and, for the most part, serve primarily as a junk folder for spam advertisements. So how are calls and messages through encrypted channels being monitored and recorded? Is it by targeting devices of individuals or more broad based? Through what methods?

The real question here is what is happening with encrypted data. The order notes: “To the extent that any encrypted material (created through use of mobile apps, etc.) forms part of the consumer data, the encrypted material is also shared with the monitoring centre at the Surveillance Centre. The Lawful Intercept Management System does not provide automated means to decrypt such encrypted data. But requests for decryption can be made to the relevant company that owns the social media application.”

But it’s the company route that the state has also sought to circumvent by procuring and deploying technology to access, monitor and decrypt data. They want direct access and these aims are also reflected in proposed legislation — ironically — the Personal Data Protection Bill.

Over the years, various filtering and surveillance technology has been purchased and put to use in Pakistan. In 2012, a tender was floated to procure a national URL filtering system. Ultimately this was shelved, but these aspirations were not. In 2013, Citizen Lab reports revealed the presence of Netsweeper and FinFisher in Pakistan. In 2019, Sandvine’s deep packet inspection technology was deployed. This year, press conferences by the caretaker set-up mentioned upgrading of web-monitoring systems. A mere Google search throws up various procurement documents on the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority’s website. In recent weeks, there has been much speculation around a firewall that seemingly has been installed — allegedly with help from China. Pakistan has long aspired to take the China route in terms of information control and monitoring of society.

What has come up in relation to the firewall is its ability with respect to encrypted content because such filtering is not limited to content but veers into the sphere of data privacy. Decrypting or breaking encryption from the outside would mean breaking through transport layer security which is not limited to certain data or platforms, but everything flowing through the network making it insecure and affecting secure transactions whether entering passwords or banking information.

Several questions arise. What is happening to encrypted data flowing through Pakistan’s networks, at what scale and through which tech tools? With whom does the legal authority to procure invasive technology lie — if at all — to monitor and decrypt data: through which legal instrument? Is what is ‘legal’ also constitutional or right?

The writer is a co-founder of Bolo Bhi, an advocacy forum for digital rights.


Published in Dawn, July 6th, 2024
PAKISTAN

In the name of development: The Baloch library in Karachi on the brink of demolition



The Sayad Hashmi Reference Library, regarded as the national heritage of the Baloch, faces threat as the Sindh government plans to build an interchange of Malir Expressway.

DAWN
Published July 5, 2024 


At a short distance from the Malir district and sessions court, if you make a left turn off the Quaidabad flyover, a bumpy road hidden by thorny bushes leads you to a small building: the Sayad Hashmi Reference Library — a haven of Baloch literature and culture.

Comprising two rooms and a hall, the kitabjah is spread across merely 277.77 square yards. It is located in the middle of the Dehkhan Garden, surrounded by fruit trees and resistant olive plants — a stark contrast to the everyday noise of Karachi. Inside, thousands of books — periodicals in Balochi, English, Urdu, Persian and Arabic — await readers on neatly stacked shelves.

Of late, however, the nondescript service road leading to the library appears dusty and muddy as some digging has been carried out. Huge bulldozers stand nearby, serving as a stark warning.
Looming threat

On June 6, the library’s caretaker, Ghulam Rasool Kalmati alias Mullah Mama, was taken aback when he arrived at the building in the early hours of the day. It was routine for the 70-year-old to visit the kitabjah every day; after all, he has been serving as the building’s caretaker ever since its inception.

But that day, Mullah Mama was surprised to see red signs inscribed on the library’s walls, indicating that the building would soon be demolished. Adjacent to the kitabjah stood a parked track-laying tractor with a broad curved up-ride blade.

“For the sake of appearance, the tractor driver and other labourers made a reason for their presence on the pretext of working on sewerage lines, but the actual intention was to bulldoze the library walls,” said Mullah Mama.

Visibly upset, he recalled the library’s glory days. “Syed Hashmi Reference Kitabjah was built by Professor Saba Shaheed (Saba Dashtiyari) with his blood and sweat … whoever damages a single brick of this building, we will assume that they stabbed us in the heart,” the caretaker lamented.

Massive digging has been carried out on the service lane in front of the library. — photo courtesy X/Bijar Baloch

Established in 2003, the library faces the threat of demolition as the Sindh government plans to build an interchange of the Malir Expressway. While no notice has been issued to the library, a survey team associated with the construction of the project recently visited the area and marked “red” half of the library’s structure for demolition.

The development has instigated a heated debate among the Baloch intelligentsia, scholars, students and writers who see it as an attempt at cultural cleansing.
Profound history

The Syed Hashmi Reference Library (SHRL) also known as Syed Hashmi Reference Kitabjah, was named after eminent Baloch writer, poet and scholar Syed Zahoor Shah Hashmi, who is credited with compiling the first Balochi dictionary and writing the first ever Balochi novella, ‘Nààzùk’.

Behind the short walls of the facility lie 16,000 books, including all the published and unpublished materials of modern and classical Balochi literature from 1951 to date.

“As of now, around 15 PhD degree holders have completed their theses from the Syed Hashmi Reference kitabjah,” Mullah Mama said proudly.

So far, 40 books have been published by the library’s management staff, besides monthly and quarterly magazines. Researchers and readers, not just from the Baloch community but also other ethnic groups, regularly visit the library to quench their thirst for knowledge.

For students, the library is a treasure during exam time, where they can study without interruption and access various research papers.

Martin Axmann, author of the book ‘Back to the Future: The Khanate of Kalat and the Genesis of Baloch Nationalism 1915-1955’, was also among those who frequented the library to collect references for his work.


SHRL is not just a library but also a literary centre where intellectuals meet. — photo courtesy SHRL website

Founded by Saba Dashtyari, the library runs on a volunteer basis. The land for the building was donated by Baloch literary figure and social activist Azeem Dekhan, with the former being the leading man who contributed greatly in cash and kindness.

Dashtiyari is a giant figure whose literary contribution to the Balochi language and literature is beyond compare. He worked as a professor at the Balochistan University, Quetta, and was hailed as the father of the library.

During his life, Dashtiyari donated his entire collection of books and half of his monthly salary to the library. He was also involved in collecting bijjari — a system in the Baloch society to solicit financial support — from his colleagues and other members of the community to ensure the library’s operations would be independent and sustainable.

On June 1, 2011, while out on his usual evening stroll, Dashtiyari was shot dead near Sanjarani Street in Quetta.
Empty words

There was once a time — between 1970 and 1990 — when Lyari was home to 30 libraries. But most of them ceased to exist due to the government’s negligence or financial complaints. Wahid Baloch, the SHRL’s vice president, fears that his library too will face a similar fate in the days to come.

“So far, there are no gestures or assurances from the government’s side to carve out a solution for the preservation of our library. They are unwilling to take us into confidence,” he lamented, adding that all they had gotten in the last few months were mere verbal assurances.

“But this practically does nothing to take us into confidence,” Wahid added, demanding that the authorities should either ensure the library’s preservation or provide an alternative location.


The reading room at the library where young writers and students frequent. — photo courtesy SHRL/website


Akbar Wali, the SHRL’s president, recalled that Malir Expressway Project Director Niaz Soomro recently visited the area to inspect its new realignment map. During an informal discussion, he assured the locals that the library would not be disturbed due to the project.

“But he was reluctant to visit the library himself and talk to the staff about it,” he said, adding that the SHRL’s management was not convinced by empty words.

On the other hand, Malir Deputy Commissioner Irfan Mirwani stated that his office had initiated a joint survey on the matter. “The drawings of the project showed that the library was not included in the alignment of the Malir Expressway Interchange.

“However, to further ascertain facts, I have also written a letter for another survey which would employ technical equipment so that the issue is resolved forthwith,” he added.
National heritage

As the threat of demolition looms over the iconic SHRL, calls have emerged urging the Baloch community to speak up for its protection.

Haneef Sharif, a popular Baloch fiction writer and filmmaker who lives in Germany, told Dawn.com that the Baloch people should speak up and campaign for the protection of the library.

The Sindh government, he suggested, should sort out the matter and provide an alternative space for the library so that the Balochs’ historic literary treasures may be preserved.

“Every Baloch should shoulder the responsibility to raise their voice for the protection of our treasure house,” said Sharif.


Red signs inscribed on the library’s walls. — photo courtesy SHRL/Facebook

Meanwhile, Wali emphasised that the SHRL was the only reference library that existed for the Baloch community living in Karachi and beyond.

However, the recently put-up demolition signs have instilled fear among Baloch scholars, writers and readers who find solace behind its walls. For them, the SHRL is not just an ordinary building, but the national heritage of an entire population.

Header image: The entrance of the Sayad Hashmi Reference Library. — photo courtesy SHRL website


The writer is a freelance columnist, researcher, short story writer and literary critic. He can be reached at masoodhameed916@gmail.com.