Wednesday, November 26, 2025

 


Speculation, US Tariff Threat, and Working People



Prabhat Patnaik 






The hallmark of a neo-liberal regime, like India, is that the real living conditions of millions of working people are left to the whims and caprices of international speculators.

The fact that speculation can exacerbate a basic situation of shortage of a commodity by encouraging its hoarding, or even cause a completely artificial shortage of it when no basic shortage exists, and thereby play havoc with the lives of the working people, especially when the commodity happens to be a necessity, has been well-known. There is no doubt, for instance, that the basic situation of excess demand in the foodgrain market, owing to deficit-financed war expenditure on India’s Eastern front, that caused the death of three million people in the Bengal famine of 1943, was exacerbated by the hoarding of grains. But the neo-liberal regime of today does something more: it makes the cost of living of the working people directly dependent not just on speculative behaviour in commodity markets, but on speculative behaviour in the currency market as well.

With controls on capital flows, including financial flows, lifted under a neoliberal regime, and with the exchange rate being determined in the market, any tendency on the part of speculators to take funds out of the country in the form of, say, US dollars, causes an exchange rate depreciation, which raises the price of imports in local currency. When these imports include essential inputs, like oil, this has a cost-push effect on the economy as a whole, which causes an inflation that necessarily leads to a fall in real wages, or more generally on the real incomes of the working people.

Indeed, such a cost-push inflation, in a world where profit mark-ups are given, can only come to an end through a compression of the real incomes of the working people; this squeeze on real incomes occurs by virtue of the fact that their money incomes are not indexed to prices. The hallmark of a neo-liberal regime, therefore, is that the real living conditions of millions of working people are left to the whims and caprices of a bunch of international speculators.

It may be thought that just as any tendency toward a financial outflow causes a squeeze on the living conditions of the working people via an exchange rate depreciation, any opposite tendency, towards an inflow of finance (in excess of the autonomously determined current account deficit in any period) should have the opposite effect of appreciating the exchange rate and hence lowering the cost of living, to the benefit of the working masses. This, however, does not occur; there is an asymmetry between the effects of a financial inflow and those of a financial outflow.

When finance flows in, if the exchange rate is allowed to appreciate, then domestic production becomes uncompetitive vis-à-vis imports; production contracts while imports increase, and the increase in imports would, in the absence of any intervention by the central bank, have to be large enough to absorb the extra financial inflow. In such a case, the country would have become indebted to foreigners in order to finance its own “de-industrialisation”, which would have been a patently absurd development. To avoid such an absurdity, the central bank in a Third World country intervenes to prevent the exchange rate from appreciating, by holding on to the extra financial inflows in the form of foreign exchange reserves; this is what the Reserve Bank of India has been doing.

The asymmetry between financial inflows and financial outflows, therefore, lies in this: while outflows cause the exchange rate to depreciate and hence the real incomes of the working people to be squeezed through cost-push inflation, inflows are simply held as additional reserves without any effect on the exchange rate.

True, the holding of such reserves serves as a cushion against financial outflows, so that when such outflows occur, reserves are decumulated to prevent a depreciation of the exchange rate. But since the decumulation of reserves serves to strengthen expectations of a depreciation of the exchange rate and hence causes a further outflow of finance, the central bank typically does not wish to run out of reserves; it does not completely prevent an exchange rate depreciation. There is some depreciation and some decumulation of reserves, resulting on the whole in a squeeze on the real incomes of the working people, as has been happening in India in recent months.

The basic asymmetry, and hence the validity of the basic proposition, therefore, remains unimpaired, namely, that financial outflows cause the exchange rate to depreciate and hence squeeze the real incomes of the working people, while financial inflows are simply held as reserves at the prevailing exchange rate without any opposite effects.

This asymmetry shows itself over a period of time as a secular decline in the exchange rate, which is exactly what we have been witnessing in India under the neo-liberal regime.

On November 10, 1990, when the Chandra Shekhar government had taken office just prior to economic “liberalisation”, the exchange rate was Rs 17.50 against one US dollar. Today, November 15, 2025, the exchange rate is Rs 88.50 against $1; a huge depreciation of the rupee during the neo-liberal period. The extent of this depreciation, by over 400%, is in contrast to a mere 33.3% depreciation over the entire preceding period, from Independence in 1947 to 1990.

All this relates to the immanent tendency of a neo-liberal capitalist economy in the Third World. There is, however, a second way in which a Third World economy becomes vulnerable to import-cost-push inflation within a neo-liberal arrangement, and that is evident today in the face of US President Donald Trump’s tariff aggression. Trump is imposing punitive tariffs against India on the grounds that India is violating the unilateral sanctions imposed by the US and other imperialist countries against Russia by buying Russian oil.

Since India’s achievement of self-reliance has been undermined by the adoption of a neo-liberal regime, and since the Narendra Modi government does not wish to reverse neo-liberal policies and also lacks the backbone to take any counter-measures against the US, it has totally caved in to US pressure and agreed to stop buying Russian oil. This is not admitted by the Indian government, but Trump has announced it in no uncertain terms, and there is no reason to disbelieve him.

India’s ceasing to buy Russian oil will push up oil prices within the country for two distinct reasons. The first is that Russian oil is cheaper than the oil that will be substituted for it, so that not buying from Russia will push up India’s oil price even at the prevailing international oil prices.

The second reason has to do with the fact that if Russia is cut off from supplying oil, then the international oil price itself will go up, for it will mean a lower overall supply relative to demand in the world economy. This will further increase oil prices within India.

A rise in oil price within the country will have a cost-push effect on the economy, which will come to an end only through a compression of the real incomes of the working people. India’s succumbing to American pressure by ceasing to buy Russian oil, therefore, will have exactly the same effect on oil prices as an exchange rate depreciation; and it will squeeze the incomes of working people of the country in an exactly analogous manner.

US sanctions against Russia are imposed not just for political strategic reasons, but also for increasing the size of the market for the more expensive American oil. Europe has already fallen in line, and committed what can only be described as economic hara-kiri, by substituting more expensive American energy for cheaper Russian energy.

Germany is well on its way to becoming deindustrialised by such substitution, and German workers have already suffered the rigours of one cold winter. Now the working people in Third World countries, like India, are also being made to suffer in order to enlarge America’s energy market.

It speaks volumes on America’s imperialist arrogance that it openly demands sacrifices from the working people all over the world in order to promote its own economic interests by enlarging the size of its energy market. It also speaks volumes on the current Indian government’s total helplessness when faced with American imperialism’s arm-twisting. This government is willing to sacrifice the interests of the Indian working people for the sake of placating a US administration that is promoting American interests.

Prabhat Patnaik is Professor Emeritus, Centre for Economic Studies and Planning, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi. The views are personal.

 

Explainer: Why Sudan Needs Peace Now


The Tricontinental 




With more than a quarter of the population displaced, numerous documented war crimes, and widespread hunger, Sudan faces unthinkable violence and deprivation as much of the world falls silent.

Representational Image. Image Courtesy:  Rawpixel

What is the reality on the ground in Sudan?

On 15 April 2023, war broke out between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) – led by the head of the Transitional Military Council, General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan – and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) – led by Lieutenant General Mohamed ‘Hemedti’ Hamdan Dagalo. Since then, backed by various governments from outside of Sudan, the two sides have fought a terrible war of attrition in which civilians are the main victims. It is impossible to say how many people have died, but clearly the death toll is significant.

One estimate found that between April 2023 and June 2024 alone the number of casualties was as high as 150,000, and several crimes against humanity committed by both sides have already been documented by various human rights organisations. At least 14.5 million Sudanese of the population of 51 million have been displaced.

The people who live in the belt between El Fasher, North Darfur, and Kadugli, South Kordofan, are struggling from acute hunger and famine. A recent analysis by the UN’s Integrated Food Security Phase Classification found that around 21.2 million Sudanese – 45% of the population – face high levels of acute food insecurity, with 375,000 people across the country facing ‘catastrophic’ levels of hunger (i.e., on the brink of starvation).

Since the war began, hundreds of thousands of internally displaced people sought refuge in El Fasher, then held largely by the SAF. Roughly 260,000 civilians were still there in October 2025 when the RSF broke the resistance, entered the city, and carried out a number of documented massacres. Among those killed were 460 patients and their companions at the Saudi Maternity Hospital.

The city’s fall has meant that the RSF is now largely in control of the vast province of Darfur, while the SAF holds much of eastern Sudan – including Port Sudan, the country’s access to the sea and international trade – as well as the capital city of Khartoum.

There is no sign of de-escalation at present.

Why are the SAF and the RSF fighting?

No war of this scale has one simple cause. The political reason is straightforward: this is a counter-revolution against the 2019 popular uprising that succeeded in ousting President Omar al-Bashir, who governed from 1993 and whose last years in power were marked by rising inflation and social crisis.

The Left and popular forces behind the 2019 uprising – which included the Sudanese Communist Party, the National Consensus Forces, the Sudanese Professional Association, the Sudan Revolutionary Front, the Women of Sudanese Civic and Political Groups, and many local resistance and neighbourhood committees – forced the military to agree to oversee the transition to a civilian government.

With the assistance of the African Union, the Transitional Sovereignty Council was established, composed of five military and six civilian members. Abdalla Hamdok was appointed prime minister and judge Nemat Abdullah Khair chief justice, with al-Burhan and Hemedti on the council as well.

The military-civilian government wrecked the economy further by floating the currency and privatising the state, thereby making gold smuggling more lucrative and strengthening the RSF (this government also signed the Abraham Accords, which normalised relations with Israel). The policies of the military-civilian government exacerbated the conditions toward the showdown over power (control over the security state) and wealth (control over the gold trade).

Despite their roles on the council, al-Burhan and Hemedti attempted coups until succeeding in 2021. Having set aside the civilians, the two military leaders went after each other. The SAF officers sought to preserve their command over the state apparatus, which in 2019 absorbed 82% of the state’s budgetary resources (as confirmed by Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok in 2020). They also moved to retain control of its enterprises, running more than 200 companies through entities such as the SAF-controlled Defence Industries System (estimated $2 billion in annual revenue) and capturing a significant share of Sudan’s formal economy across mining, telecommunications, and import-export commodity trade.

The RSF – rooted in the Janja’wid (devils on horseback) militia – tried to leverage the autonomous war economy centralised around the Al Junaid Multi-Activities Corporation, which controls major gold-producing areas in Darfur and about half a dozen mining sites, including Jebel Amer.

Since 50–80% of Sudan’s overall gold production is smuggled (as of 2022) – mainly to the UAE – rather than officially exported, and since the RSF dominates production in western Sudan’s artisanal mining zones (which account for 80–85% of total production), the RSF captures huge sums from gold revenue every year (estimated at $860 million from Darfur mines alone in 2024).

Beneath these political and material contests lie ecological pressures that compound the crisis. Part of the reason for the long conflict in Darfur has been the desiccation of the Sahel. For decades, erratic rainfall and heatwaves due to the climate catastrophe have expanded the Sahara Desert southward, making water resources a cause of conflict and sparking clashes between nomads and settled farmers. Half of Sudan’s population now lives with acute food insecurity.

The failure to create an economic plan for a population wracked by rapid changes in weather patterns – alongside the theft of resources by a small elite – leaves Sudan vulnerable to long-term conflict. This is not just a war between two strong personalities, but a struggle over the transformation of resources and their plunder by outside powers. A ceasefire agreement is once more on the table, but the likelihood that it will be accepted or upheld is very low as long as resources remain the shining prize for the various armed groups.

What are the possibilities of peace in Sudan?

A path toward peace in Sudan would require six elements:

1.   An immediate, monitored ceasefire that includes the creation of humanitarian corridors for the transit of food and medicines. These corridors would be under the leadership of the Resistance Committees, which have the democratic credibility and networks to deliver aid directly to those in need.

2.   An end to the war economy, specifically shutting down the gold and weapons pipelines. This would include imposing strict sanctions on the sale of weapons to and the purchase of gold from the UAE until it severs all relations with the RSF. Export controls at Port Sudan must be implemented as well.

3.   The safe return of political exiles and the start of a process to rebuild political institutions under a civilian government elected or supported by the popular forces – mainly the Resistance Committees. The SAF must be stripped of its political power and economic assets and subjugated to the government. The RSF must be disarmed and demobilised.

4.   The immediate reconstruction of Sudan’s higher judiciary to investigate and prosecute those responsible for atrocities.

5.   The immediate creation of a process of accountability that includes the prosecution of warlords through a properly constituted court in Sudan.

6.   The immediate reconstruction of Sudan’s planning commission and its ministry of finance to shift surplus from export enclaves toward public goods and social protections.

These six points elaborate upon the three pillars of the African Union and the Intergovernmental Authority on Development’s AU-IGAD Joint Roadmap for the Resolution of the Conflict in Sudan (2023). The difficulty with this roadmap – as with similar proposals – is that it is dependent on donors, including actors that are implicated in the violence. For these six points to become a reality, outside powers must be pressured to end their backing of the SAF and the RSF. These include Egypt, the European Union, Qatar, Russia, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and the United States. Neither this roadmap nor the Jeddah channel – a Saudi-US mediation track launched in 2023 that focuses on short truces and humanitarian access – includes Sudanese civilian groups, least of all the Resistance Committees.

Courtesy: Tricontinental: Institute of Social Research

 

The Long Siege of Cuba



Arsh K.S. 





The cost of economic embargo of Havana by the US for over 60 years amounts to $933 billion.





60 years of Cuban medical cooperation.

The economic embargo of Cuba by the US has now lasted over 60 years, being formally imposed in 1962. It is held together by a number of laws enacted by the US, including the Trading with the Enemy Act 1917, Foreign Assistance Act of 1971, Cuban Assets Controls Regulations 1963, Cuban Democracy Act of 1992 and the Helms Burton Act of 1996. These acts bar US citizens from conducting any trade that may be in the interest of Cuba, from owning or trading Cuban sovereign national debt, and from Cuban banks from operating in the US.

US citizens are still able to travel to Cuba yet they are not able to spend money there without a license from the Office of Foreign Assets Control. Recently, in 2021 the US reinstated Cuba into the State Sponsor of Terrorism list, stating that Cuba harbours several fugitives from the US as well as members of the Columbian National Liberation army, which the US has declared to be a terrorist organisation.

The cost of these sanctions, sanctions being what appears to be forefront in the mind of US President Donald Trump, to Cuba over 60 years has amounted to $933 billion. The United Nations has urged the US to lift its sanctions on Cuba, citing a shrinking of the island nation’s GDP, blackouts, food shortage and inflation.

As the political situation stands in the US currently, it is highly unlikely that the sanctions against Cuba will be lifted any time soon, as only the US Congress has the power to do so, and while occasionally Bills are introduced in the Congress to repeal the statues, there is at present not enough political will to have these passed.

Beyond immediate economic gains in terms of monetary value, these embargoes also mean that Cuba is denied markets, international aid and technology transfers. This is not restricted to those from the US alone. For instance, the earlier mentioned Helms-Burton Act of 1996 allows US citizens to sue foreign companies in US courts who have traded in property that was nationalised by the Cuban government after the 1959 Revolution.  This has meant that companies in Canada, and the European Union have been deterred from trading or investing in Cuba so as to not risk a lawsuit or reputational harm.

Another Act that has seriously curtailed the facility of international trade with Cuba has been the Cuban Democracy Act of 1992. This Act prevents any ship from docking at a US port for 180 days after the vessel has loaded or unloaded goods at a Cuban port. This limits Cuba’s access to regular shipping lines and forces the island nation to rely on smaller and more expensive routes.

Perhaps, the most serious measure that has curtailed Cuba’s integration into the international financial system is the fact that most international trade and financial transactions are denominated in US dollars. Regulations by the Office of Foreign Asset Control prohibit transactions in dollars for deals that entail Cuban interests. The choice left to foreign banks is to either conduct Cuba related transactions and face massive US fines, potentially losing access to the US financial system, or not to conduct deals that entail Cuban interests.

This stark alternative has effectively meant that most international banks, including those based in countries that are friendly to Cuba, have chosen the latter. The price of doing business with Cuba for banks have been severe. BNP Paribas, for example, in 2014, had to pay a fine of nearly $9 billion to the US authorities for violating such sanctions. This has made it extremely difficult for Cuba to pay for essential imports, such as food and medicine, receive remittance (that may be desired to be sent by Cubans living and working in the US back to their family in Cuba), and conduct basic international financial transfers.

Cuba’s main partners in international trade are Venezuela, following agreements formalised by the Hugo Chavez government, China, Spain, Vietnam, Brazil, Mexico and Canada. The island nation, however, also has trade relations with India, which constitute Cuban exports of tobacco, nickel, raw hides and leather and Indian exports of pharmaceutical products, vehicles, chemicals, plastic and food. The total volume of trade between India and Cuba during 2022-2023 was just under $84 million .

India has consistently voted in the UN in favour of lifting the US embargo against Cuba. As recently as 2024, the Indian First Secretary Sneha Dubey reiterated the damaging effects of the embargo on Cuba’s economy, and people, underlining that India, as the world’s most populace democracy, stands with the UN Assembly in its unambiguous rejection of domestic US laws having an extraterritorial impact. In the vote in the Assembly, 187 nations voted against the embargo with only the US and Israel supporting it. 

In recent history, there appeared to have been a thaw with President Barack Obama in 2014 reopening the US embassy in Havana and the Cuban embassy in Washington, lifting restrictions on remittances, travel, and allowing the Cuban government to open a bank account in the US. These measures, however, have largely been reversed in President Trump’s first term itself.

The writer is is an independent journalist who is pursuing a Ph.D. The views are personal.



Empowered teachers

Published November 24, 2025 
DAWN
The writer is a teacher educator, author and Fellow of the Higher Education Academy, UK.
 

IN the developing world, teachers have a role that extends well beyond that of educators. The change that teachers bring about not only impacts their students’ academic attainment, it also has ripple effects on their students’ families in many ways. Education is a critical tool of social development and, as evidence shows, learning outcomes are strongly correlated to teacher quality. Our cultural and religious legacy also recognises the indelible impact of a teacher and describes teaching as a ‘noble’ profession and almost elevates the teacher to the status of a parent.

Yet, our teachers remain constrained. Trapped in systems reeking of mistrust, lack of professional support and ad hoc policies, teachers often find their individual passion and dedication unsustainable. No matter how goal-focused or resilient they may be, a counterproductive environment erodes their motivation.

The role and vision of school leaders is paramount in creating a community of learning where teachers collaborate across school levels, where change is organically sustained, where focus on positive growth is the norm and teachers share the vision. Resistance damages the progress of educational institutions.

Resistance can never be quelled; it finds its way into deflected anger, targeting students in classrooms, or it manifests itself in conflicts with parents and colleagues. These outcomes are not only detrimental to learners’ development and well-being, but also damaging for the students’ educational achievement and the reputation of schools. The solution may lie in empowering teachers strategically, so that they feel trusted, supported and inspired. Much of that has to do with hiring the right people and handing over responsibilities rather than hovering with criticism. Great schools aren’t built by policies and programmes — they’re built by great teachers who can support students and ignite their potential. Teachers flourish when they can innovate, experiment and take accountability for their actions. And when teachers flourish, students thrive.

In schools where systems are in place to embed teachers’ voice and vision, where their input is not merely sought by way of feedback and surveys and where they are included in decision-making, the level of energy, focus and momentum changes to a ‘can do’ attitude in teaching and learning practices.


Great schools are built by great teachers.


An area of sustainable support is professional development. In many schools, professional development sessions are conducted as a ‘check box’ exercise. However, there are also schools where teachers are involved in planning sessions, bringing challenges to the surface and exchanging research that leads to action. In these schools, teachers know that their contribution matters.

Teacher empowerment isn’t a one-time act, and it isn’t a coin flip that can bring about changes instantly. The effort comes from the vision at the top and it requires sustained action through conversations where leaders listen and lift colleagues, where grievances are addressed and where the mindset is that of striving together for greater institutional success.

Teachers feel empowered when they are involved in school improvement planning, when they are part of growth decisions and are given strategic aims that they know will impact growth. Even where linear career progression is not always an option, pathways can be created to add roles and responsibilities that capitalise on the skills of individual teachers. For example, a teacher who is willing to invest time and effort in training as a well-being officer can be tasked with developing and implementing a well-being plan for colleagues. Those who have experience in leading tra­nsformation can be tasked with helping junior colleagues in adapting to technology or new processes. Those who are great at mediation skills can be given ‘ombuds’ roles to address conflicts among staff.

Schools today operate within a complex environment shaped by heightened parental expectations, technological demands and societal pressures affecting social and emotional well-being. While they navigate these complexities, the task of school leaders has escalated into a demanding role that requires rapid and continuous adaptation, razor-sharp monitoring and seamless communication.

The teachers’ role is no longer restricted to delivering the curriculum and producing results. It has extended to a collaborative partnership in building systems of education through reimagining possibilities, while continuously pushing the boundaries of achievement and capability. The learners — the ultimate beneficiaries — inevitably gain from the enhanced role and upgraded skills of their teachers.

The writer is a teacher educator, author and Fellow of the Higher Education Academy, UK. The views expressed are her own and do not reflect those of her employer.
neda.mulji@gmail.com
X: @nedamulji

Published in Dawn, November 24th, 2025
PAKISTAN


Going back in time

Published November 24, 2025
DAWN

The writer teaches politics and sociology at Lums.


WITH a series of significant constitutional amendments as well as de facto changes in governance, a distinctive political system is taking shape in Pakistan. The fact that it is authoritarian goes without saying. The exact form of this authoritarianism is worth thinking through.

The bare standard definition of democracy, i.e., a political system where election results generally decide who sits in office, was effectively done away with after the 2024 poll. The existence of significant question marks over the electoral validity of the civilian government marked a clear shift in the ‘hybrid regime’ dynamic in place since 2018.

With time in office dependent on decree rather than election outcomes, parliament itself now operates within the limitations set by an establishment-controlled executive. The legislative agenda, in whatever form it exists, is now centrally ord­a­i­ned rather than deliberated and discussed. The PTI, despite its ballot box performance, stands dis­­­enfranchised and marginalised in this process.

The concluding phase of the system’s transformation comes via the passage of the 26th and 27th amendments. Through these changes, the judiciary in nominal terms is now subject to parliamentary authority. But as laid out above, if parliament is de facto subservient to the executive, that means the judiciary now too is an implementation branch of executive power.

The current configuration of governance is not too dissimilar to what the British envisioned in the early 20th century.

Countries the world over conjure up a variety of different political systems enshrined in their constitutions — presidential, semi-presidential, parliamentary, consociational etc — but all of them have one thing in common: judicial review of the executive. With the latest developments in judiciary-executive relations, thanks to amendment nos. 26 and 27, the last remaining vestiges (mostly a fig-leaf) of constitutionalism stand discarded.

So what are we left with? It’s tempting to think of this as personalised autocracy, or even some 21st-century variant of absolutism. A strongman at the top ruling through a set of vassals, drawing on the power of an inordinately well-funded and organised security apparatus. The historical parallels evoke Bismarck, but the closest contemporary parallels are Middle Eastern dictatorships, especially in Egypt.

But there is a historical instance that resembles the current situation in somewhat similar ways. This instance is in fact from this very region, which makes the comparison more apt. And it won’t be remiss to suggest that the patterns of authority taking root in Pakistan today actually go all the way back to the roots established during an earlier era.

I’m primarily referring to the political system that evolved in the late colonial period, especially through its two main legislative instruments — the Government of India Acts of 1919 and 1935. Conventionally taught in the local curricula as ‘dyarchy’, the system first devolved several aspects of governance to provincial governments, though with varying scope for elected versus non-elected representatives. At the central level, some aspects were handed over to the legislative council, while others (finance, defence, administration) remained under executive authority.

The Government of India Act, 1935, enlarged the role of elected provincial legislatures in gove­r­nance, but maintained executive control on cent­ral subjects. The graduation of the legislative ass­embly to a truly representative governing aut­h­o­r­i­ty never took place. Self-government was thus on­­­­ly made possible with the end of colonial authority.

Allowing for some liberty in the analogy, Pakistan’s current configuration of governance is not too dissimilar to what the British envisioned in the early 20th century. The provinces have become concessionary arenas for popular politics. Party activity operates somewhat unencumbered, to the extent that even the main opposition to the regime is allowed to retain its government in KP.

NFC transfers help lubricate this politics, with party support being shored up (as in PPP in Sindh and PTI in KP) or being rebuilt from its obliteration (PML-N in Punjab) through patronage and mega projects. Much like in colonial India, elites from the propertied classes use this arena for a variety of political and self-serving objectives. Effectiveness of spending and impact on welfare are secondary concerns.

At the centre, though, the story is entirely different. Here we see the exercise of viceregal authority in full bloom. Parliament serves the same function (with the same degree of potency) that the legislative council historically did. The judiciary’s primary task is to provide exceptions to bypass any fundamental rights. Key decisions on finance, defence, and administration are taken by civilian and military bureaucrats, and the current cabinet resembles the appointed officials of a past era in all but name.

Such authoritarian control coexisting with political federalism, at least for now, seems like an odd combination. Past episodes of dictatorial control tried to centralise authority by undercutting the provinces through steps like the One-Unit scheme or via the curtailment of provincial res­ources). But in many ways, events of the past few years are a reversion of the Pakistani state to its foundational DNA from the early 20th century.

The tragedy here is the direction of change. Each successive Government of India Act enl­arged the space for representative politics, under strong pressure from mass movements of self-rule and independence. The political sphere of that time carried a variety of ideological currents, all of which sought an emancipated future — one in which viceregal authority would give way to the exercise of sovereignty by the people themselves.

Our direction is the opposite. Having enshrined the principles of democratic government and federalism in 1973 (reaffirmed in 2008), the state has now moved in the opposite direction. It has closed off key domains of governance from representative authority, shut off judicial review for its actions, and made parliament largely redundant in form, if not in appearance. Barring any resistance, the next step on this trajectory would take us further back into the late-19th century, when even provincial politics is deemed surplus to requirement. Let’s see what the 28th amendment has in store.


X: @Umairjav

Published in Dawn, November 24th, 2025
PAKISTAN

Sugar politics

Editorial 
Published November 26, 2025 
DAWN


ECONOMIC decisions made in panic, without credible data to base them on, invariably backfire. The government’s decision earlier this year to import sugar to stabilise the market in times of shortages is a case in point. The sweetener’s retail prices have surged in parts of the country, including Karachi where the rate has already jumped to Rs210-215 per kilo, well above the official price of Rs174-77. This is despite the start of the new harvest when prices typically remain stable, at least in the early months of the crushing season. The reason for the current spike appears to be the government’s push to clear imported sugar first through administrative and regulatory restrictions on the supply of locally produced sugar in the market.

The closure of the FBR’s sales-tracking portal is a major factor interrupting the dispatch of sugar from mills. The curbs on its movement across provinces have further restricted the free flow of stocks, creating localised scarcity and price hikes. In Punjab and elsewhere, traders complain that mills are being forced to sell sugar only to designated government distributors — another way of controlling retail supply, but at the cost of consumers. Market manipulation by the government for price stability is not new in Pakistan. However, it is perhaps for the first time that a government has pushed local producers out of the competition to clear its own imported stocks, even though it means burdening low-income families. Sugar millers cannot absolve themselves of their role in the situation they find themselves in today. Their reluctance to provide exact production data to the authorities in order to evade taxes and manipulate the market closer to the start of the new harvest and higher-demand months must have led the authorities to panic and make knee-jerk decisions. Whether the market is manipulated by the government or mill owners, the sufferers are always ordinary consumers. This will continue until the sugar market is completely deregulated.

Published in Dawn, November 26th, 2025




Decency knows no passport
Published November 25, 2025
DAWN
The writer is Dawn’s correspondent in Delhi.

IT was meant to be like any other day of mastery and daredevilry in Wing Commander Namansh Syal’s life. His plan was to showcase the acclaimed calisthenics of Indian Air Force’s largely homegrown if acrimoniously delayed light combat aircraft Tejas before a global audience at the Dubai Air Show last week. Fate had other plans. The Tejas fell silent as it dove to the ground during an aerobatic manoeuvre killing Syal in the horrific fireball it became.

Things go wrong when least expected. The Titanic comes to mind. Another example is of Yuri Gagarin, the hero of our world of science and wonder, the first man to go into outer space in 1959. The Soviet cosmonaut died eight years later when the MiG-15 he was flying with a co-pilot in a test flight crashed in bad weather. For the Tejas, it was the second crash in 20 months, but the pilot had bailed out safely then. The high-profile Apollo disasters showed the best technology can be flawed. All three astronauts perished in the 1967 fire in a pre-launch test of Apollo-1. The Apollo-13 accident on the other hand happened in outer space, but miraculously no lives were lost.

Syal’s tragedy prodded a gentle side of the human spirit when deeply felt tributes started coming from across the border to the fallen Indian. One heartwarming letter published on Indian social media apparently from a Pakistani well-wisher is the kind of stuff that helps tone down the toxicity unleashed on both sides by the short and bitter military stand-off in May between the two countries.

Syal’s tragedy prodded a gentle side of the human spirit when deeply felt tributes started coming from across the border.

“To the Indian Air Force, to the family now navigating an ocean of absence: I offer what words can never carry — condolence wrapped in understanding that only those who’ve worn wings can truly know. A pilot has not merely fallen. A guardian of impossible altitudes has been summoned home. Somewhere tonight, a uniform hangs unworn. Somewhere, a child asks when the father returns. Somewhere, the sky itself feels emptier.” This letter from Pakistan was shared online by Sabrang India, an NGO that works for human rights and communal harmony in South Asia.

Among the grieving recipients would be Syal’s wife Afshan, herself an IAF officer. The condolence message reflected a sense of empathy from across the borders. It slammed the loutishness that passes for patriotic fervour between the two countries.

The letter purportedly from a PAF veteran could not be completely ascertained for authenticity, but such sentiments are not unknown to exist in India and Pakistan and occasionally do carry the day on both sides.

There is palpable moping in the Indian media about the likelihood of business loss from the second consecutive crash of Tejas in 20 months. This is the kind of stuff that makes the soul cringe. I had a similar experience working with a Western news agency when the Rwanda massacres were happening. The news of daily gory killings had become smaller than a single column weather insert. Then one day, the stringer in Kigali filed a story about how the massacres were negatively impacting Rwanda’s coffee crop. The bells at the New York Stock Exchange went wild, and the news agency’s stringer was publicly praised as a role model.

Britain’s fabled Red Arrows flying heroes have been involved in several flight accidents, but did we ever hear of the Hawk T1 jet losing money in the bargain? Red Arrows lost Flt Lt Jon Egging in 2011. Egging’s Hawk T1 jet crashed after a display at the Bournemouth Air Festival, leading to the determination that G-force impairment may have contributed to the crash. There is speculation that a similar roller-coaster-like impairment may have visited Syal, which comes with sharp acceleration against gravity. Cpl Bayliss died in 2018 when his plane crashed at RAF Valley shortly after take-off during a faux engine failure manoeuvre as the pilot Flt Lt David Stark ejected safely.

The Wire carried a troubling report on the problems India has faced in defence manufacturing and vending hardware to foreign buyers. “The Tejas crash inevitably revives memories of an earlier disastrous export venture: the sale of its seven Dhruv Advanced Light Helicopters (ALHs) to Ecuador in 2008-2009 for $42.5 million, of which four crashed,” wrote well-regarded defence analyst Rahul Bedi. “These crashes eventually led to the Ecuador Air Force (EAF) terminating its ALH contract with HAL in October 2015, in a major setback to what was then the first ever major export of an indigenous military platform.”

If money is really a concern, then a great tribute to Syal’s death could be a national call for total transparency in arms deals that Indian governments have become so brazenly infamous for.

Instead, Syal’s death has set off a frantic search for someone to blame. The official inquiry hasn’t begun, but the more nationalist TV discussants on Indian channels are blaming the US for allegedly selling Indian Air Force inferior engines used in Tejas.

At a human level, Syal’s death and the heart-tugging tributes pouring in for him can be seen as a reminder that people-to-people ties deserve to be placed at the heart of promoting a nicer, friendlier future for both countries. Let that be the essence of what the letter said in its tribute to the Indian pilot.

jawednaqvi@gmail.com

Published in Dawn, November 25th, 2025
Multilateral woes

Mahir Ali 
Published November 26, 2025 
DAWN


THE arrival in Kyiv last week of an American emissary with a Russian-drafted ultimatum for the Ukrainian leadership sparked a panic among the latter’s EU/Nato allies. They discussed the bombshell on the sidelines of the G20 summit in Johannesburg, and set up talks in Geneva.

The initial draft, agreed between Trump envoy Steve Witkoff and Kremlin emissary Kirill Dimitriev, involved Ukraine ceding about a fifth of its territory, including parts that Russia has failed to occupy, plus vague security guarantees and possible membership of the EU — but not of Nato. Apart from rewarding Vladimir Putin’s aggression with territorial gains and the lifting of sanctions, the plan envisaged $100 billion of frozen Russian assets being invested in Ukraine, with 50 per cent of the profits flowing to the US.

Donald Trump’s hawkish secretary of state, Marco Rubio, appears to have been excluded from the initial negotiations with Moscow (just as Putin has sidelined Rubio’s Russian counterpart, Sergei Lavrov), but he has been front and centre of the Geneva process. Any revised plan acceptable to Kyiv and its European allies will require Moscow’s acquiescence, which will not be forthcoming. The war, which Putin has lately stepped up, will drag on.

Any sustainable modus vivendi requires agreement — and concessions — from both warring sides, and particularly the aggressor. Volodymyr Zelensky, beleaguered domestically by corruption charges against some of his closest associates, might have seemed like an easy target for the White House at this juncture. Political troubles also threaten some of his most vociferous European backers (including Keir Starmer and Emmanuel Macron), while the continent more generally heads in a far-right direction courtesy of centrist follies.

Do global institutions mean anything anymore?


Notably, none of those who rallied to the Ukrainian cause found any fault with UNSC Resolution 2803, which endorses a recolonisation of Gaza and offers no obvious pathway to a Palestinian state that a bunch of European powers have only recently endorsed. Equally, none of the Arab or Muslim states queried an arrangement whereby Israel continues to control over half of the territory where it has murdered more than 70,000 Palestinians. The barbarity has not been halted, as Israel defies the ceasefire almost every day to slaughter dozens more. No Palestinians had any say in the US/ Israeli truce deal, which enables a slightly more subtle genocide — with no repercussions, 80 years after the Nuremberg trials, for the perpetrators.

The so-called rule of law in the postwar settlement that followed the anti-Nazi crusade never meant very much as the Cold War unfolded, and the demise of Palestine in 1948 enjoyed the imprimatur of the UN as well as the US and the USSR. Occasionally, one encounters a degree of nostalgia for the old order, when the battle lines were clearer. The millions of lives lost in Korea, the Congo, Malaya, Indonesia and Vietnam during that era can hardly be ignored. The post-Cold War era involved genocides in Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia, long before Arab states joined the renewed Western plunder of Africa. The misguided ‘war on terror’ unleashed after the 9/11 terrorist attacks on America, meanwhile, has left gaping wounds from Iraq to sub-Saharan Africa that have been exploited by deleterious forces.

The UN remains a worthy symbol of the postwar order’s finest achievements, but the lack of renovation over the past 80 years means it struggles to make a difference. COP30 reflects its diminished clout. The Belém conference did not crumble,

but its unsurprising failure to pinpoint a path towards the eli­mination of fossil fuels in the face of resistance from a Sa­­udi-led clique serves as yet another rem­i­nder that the oil and gas aficionados who control the world’s lungs will continue to throttle them.

The US attended neither COP30 (because its leader thinks climate change is a hoax) nor the G20 (because its leader thinks South Africa is involved in an anti-white genocide, an idea ridiculed by black and white South Africans alike), and it wasn’t much missed at either venue. As lame as the outcome was at Belém, it would likely have been worse if the US had participated. And likewise in Johannesburg, even though the communique of the first G20 in Africa managed only to cobble together 122 motherhood statements with little prospect of being implemented.

Beyond the fossil fuel lobbyists, the persistent COP problem is that commitments — such as those relating to adaption or amelioration funds for poorer nations — remained unfulfilled, regardless of whether they are doubled or tripled. Likewise various other global or regional promises. It seems highly unlikely that what remains of multilateralism can rescue the world, let alone components such as Palestine, Ukraine or Sudan.

mahir.dawn@gmail.com

Published in Dawn, November 26th, 2025
The captive conscience

Pakistan’s current legal framework for animal welfare is a study in anachronism, drawn from colonial-era legislation dating back to 1890. 

Imaan Ali Sheikh | Ali Tauqeer Sheikh 
Published November 26, 2025 
DAWN


THE silence of a predawn Lahore was shattered by an act of institutional brutality: a late-night operation near Data Darbar by the Lahore Development Authority. This unannounced sweep saw structures demolished and an unquantified number of lives — animals and birds — allegedly snuffed out.

The LDA has denied any wrongdoing. Yet, this deliberate, brutal operation is the latest scar on Pakistan’s conscience, rooted in our reliance on an antique statute whose meagre, poorly enforced fines utterly fail to reflect this magnitude of cruelty. Witnessing this gap between legal mandate and moral obligation is a personal affront; our commitment to justice must extend beyond human boundaries to embrace every life.

Institutional cruelty in Pakistan manifests directly through negligent governance: municipal bodies routinely employ brutal methods like mass poisoning to cull stray dog populations, while government-run facilities, such as zoos in Karachi and Lahore, are notorious for gross negligence, poor infrastructure, and underfeeding, turning sanctuaries into sites of suffering.

This cruelty is further compounded by the official tolerance of sprawling, unregulated animal and bird markets across major cities, including Tollinton Market in Lahore, Empress Market in Karachi, Raja Bazar in Rawalpindi, and the main animal bazaar in Peshawar, where wild and exotic species endure severe confinement and abuse, perpetuating a system of commercialised misery.

The legal incapacity: Pakistan’s current legal framework for animal welfare is a study in anachronism, drawn from colonial-era legislation dating back to 1890. Despite superficial amendments, the law remains structurally incapable of addressing contemporary challenges: the modern pet trade, the necessity of clearer definitions of cruelty, the ethics of captivity, and the broader environmental impact. This legal incapacity manifests in two distinct but related wrongs: the arbitrary, destructive action of authorities, and the very establishment of markets that trade in captive life. The lack of prior notice in such operations highlights an institutional apathy and procedural negligence that the law implicitly permits. Our failure to modernise this foundational act signifies a national refusal to integrate ethical and ecological stewardship into our governance model.

Pakistan’s current legal framework for animal welfare is a study in anachronism.

Constitutional imperatives: The inadequacy of the 1890 Act stands in stark contrast to the progressive jurisprudence of Pakistan’s superior courts that has revolutionised animal law. Article 9A of the Constitution guarantees the ‘right to a clean, healthy, and sustainable environment’. The courts have repeatedly and unequivocally affirmed that this right is ecologically inclusive, extending protection to ecosystems and wildlife. Environmental degradation, including the cruel confinement of animals, is thus recognised as a direct violation of constitutional principles of sustainability and environmental justice.

This judicial evolution culminated in the Islamabad High Court’s landmark 2020 judgement on the fate of the animals at the Islamabad Zoo. In this ruling, Justice Athar Minallah firmly established that animals possess inherent legal rights, demanding they live in environments that meet their behavioural, social, and physiological needs. Critically, it was recognised that the practice of keeping animals in cages purely for human amusement to be a form of “torture”. This ruling created a direct constitutional mandate, bridging the gap between an antique colonial law and the nation’s highest legal standard, asserting that the state has a fundamental duty to protect all non-human life.

This principle has consistently echoed across provincial high courts, rejecting the human tendency to arrogate the right to enslave animals born free and affirming their essential role in ecological balance. Furthermore, the superior courts have decisively held that wildlife protection is a critical precondition for mitigating ecosystem damage. The Supreme Court has clarified that any damage to animal populations and biodiversity constitutes an adverse environmental effect, legally linking harm to animals with comprehensive constitutional degradation.

Ecological cost: The confinement and exploitation of animals have consequences that extend far beyond individual suffering. Ecosystems function through complex, regulated relationships. The removal or captivity of apex predators leads to unchecked herbivore growth, resulting in overgrazing, vegetation loss, soil erosion, and accelerated deforestation. This directly impacts carbon absorption, effectively contributing to the acceleration of climate change. Animal welfare, therefore, is not a philanthropic sideline. It is an environmental and climate necessity.

The current Animal Act fails to recognise or integrate entire classes of creatures vital to ecosystem health, notably insects and other invertebrates. Native pollinators, like bees, underpin Pakistan’s agriculture, providing immense, uncalculated economic value. By excluding these essential biodiversity assets, the law ensures that comprehensive ecosystem preservation remains impossible, undermining its own purported goals. True conservation demands a shift from the exhibition-based models of zoos to habitat-based protection.

International commitments: The LDA’s action exposes our failure to uphold international obligations. The Convention on Biological Diversity mandates the preservation of ecosystems, a goal our superior courts confirm is impossible without protecting animal welfare. The judicial condemnation of caging as “torture” directly supports the CBD’s core principle of in-situ conservation, rejecting the cruel ex-situ exhibition model perpetuated by our antiquated law. Furthermore, as a signatory to CITES, we are bound to ensure even permitted trade minimises animal suffering, a standard routinely violated by the chaotic pet markets. These global commitments provide the legal and ethical scaffolding for necessary reform and demand the integration of ecological values into national policy.

Way forward: Globally, comprehensive legal frameworks mandate humane treatment and ethical stewardship across all species. Pakistan must urgently replace the 1890 Act to safeguard essential species like invertebrates and align domestic governance with the global commitment to ecological justice.

Without a comprehensive, constitutional, and ecologically guided overhaul of the antique Animal Act, incidents of cruelty will continue, perpetually granting legal impunity and accelerating ecosystem disruption. Reforming this law is not a matter of choice; it is a constitutional, environmental, and international responsibility to ensure accountability, humane treatment, and the indispensable protection of our natural environment.

Imaan Ali Sheikh, a graduate of University of London, practices law in Islamabad.

Ali Tauqeer Sheikh is a sustainable development and climate change expert, based in Islamabad.


Published in Dawn, November 26th, 2025



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