Posts Tagged Pakistan

Back In The USA

Many moons ago when I wore a younger man’s clothes I spent three months in Pakistan. I didn’t know it when I arrived at the airport to leave, but I didn’t have permission to leave the country. After I had gone through customs, checked in with Air France (yes, Air France, and I’d fly them again in a heartbeat), I was stopped at the security check, my luggage removed from the plane, and I was told I couldn’t leave the country without a travel permit. As an American, I hadn’t a clue that a country would stop a traveller from leaving. A criminal, yes. Someone who had spent three months in country without incident, no. The next day I and several co-travellers went to the police station and in a scene from Dickens (imagine very old men in uniforms surrounded by massive amount of paperwork) we were issued Travel Papers and I was able to leave the country (on Air France, who did right by me).

Well.

I’m glad to see that someone else will be now be able to leave Pakistan – Mukhtar Mai, the woman whose gang rape was ordered by a tribal council to punish her family for her brother’s alleged indescretion. For reasons best known to the Pakistani government, she wasn’t allowed to leave the country until the prime minister of Pakistan himself took her name off the do not leave the country list yesterday.

But while her story ends there for now, my tale continues on. 

I look at the AP version at the KC Star — it reads like the woman’s appeal moved the PM. Ditto for The Independent. I look at ABC News and it reads like international pressure moved the PM.  The Indian Express notes that it was pressure from “key ally” United States that did the trick. Finally the WaPo version cites a single factor: “a stern protest by the Bush administration”. Australia’s News.com.au isn’t content just to cite some amorphous pressure, they have the best detail on who said what stern protests. The NYT, God love them, can’t bring itself to mention the word Bush in a positive light, so it has a “pressure from Washington” formulation. Could be the state, could be congress, could be George, who knows for sure.  ReutersReuters makes it clear just who applied the pressure and how it was applied.

But the best coverage was at Voice of America, which supplied all the details, and even covered the NYT’s prior coverage. In head to head coverage, the VOA is consistantly one of the best for news coverage.

Google News – it’s how you can compare a bunch of different versions of a story in a hurry.

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Memories Of The Way It Was

The chow hall staff part of this entry by Donald Sensing reminds me of my time in Pakistan (see the pictures — be thankful you can’t smell them, unlike Lileks’ soap) when one of my government co-travelers wouldn’t tip the waiters in the hotel (the Karachi Holiday Inn) for breakfast because the cost was included as part of the stay. We all put down 10 rupees (a little over 50 cents at the time) but Terry. If they did something special like get you watermelon, we’d throw down 15 or 20 rupies (about a buck). Terry never tipped a red rupee at breakfast, was stingy at lunch and dinner, was demanding and abusive at all times, and never could figure out why he got such lousy service and the rest of us, polite, thankful for goodies, and relentless tippers, got such good service. If we ordered the same thing two times in a row at a meal, the waiters would place that order as soon as our fannies hit the leather. Even when we ordered something different, we’d be finished with our meal and Terry wouldn’t have his yet. No matter how many times we urged him to tip and be nice, he couldn’t draw the connection between his behavior and its results. 

Terry complained about the food in Susie Wong’s — the hotel’s Chinese restaurant — which was delicious, but Terry claimed it wasn’t authentic because it wasn’t like the Chinese food back home in Milwaukee. Now when I say he complained, I mean he’d complain to us and then berate the staff. He complained about the music as well, until one evening he brought his own tape for them to play. For what ever reason, the replay was a bit slow, with all the notes flattened, and it sounded terrible. After a little bit, Terry blew up, berated the waiter some more, and we avoided eating with him as much as we could. 

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Friday On The Road With Ali

man riding donkey

This photo is from my long ago sojurn in Pakistan. What can I say? I was young, experimental, and I thought taking black and white photo’s had edge. This mythic shot depects the journey of linear thought along the road to nowhere in the arid plane of logic. Or it could just be somebody riding a donkey along a dusty road.

Another photo entry for Unbillable Hours Picture Envy

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Too Much Information?

I’m glad they caught the Al Qaeda mastermind in Pakistan. What I don’t get is all the information the press is reporting about it — and I assume the info is being provided by our own government. If you honestly think this guy knows who, what, and where, wouldn’t you like to keep his capture quiet until you can pick up the people he knows about? You have to figure the publicity is going to be like turning the lights on cockroaches – there’s a whole lot of scurrying going on right now. And by letting on that computers and documents were also seized, every Al Qaeda operative has to figure they’ve been compromised – they can’t rely on Mr. Mohammed’s not talking. I suppose it could be that the disruption, uncertainty, and fear caused by the announcement outweighed the possibility of capturing more operatives; it could be that our intelligence agencies figured Al Qaeda knew and could inform it’s people anyway even if there were no public report; and maybe it was felt that a public report would cause a burst in bottom up message traffic as operatives checked in with higher ups that would be more enlightening than a burst of top down if the higher ups were informing the troops. And of course, we can’t be told why the info was released or it would defeat the purpose of releasing it.

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American Consulate in Karachi Attacked (Again)

The Pakistani News Service is reporting that motorcyclists shot up a security checkpoint at the American consulate in Karachi.

The above is a picture I took in 1986 when I spent a few months there. The Hotel Metropole mentioned in the linked news article is a fine old hotel, located just down the street. The Lufthansa aircrew stayed there at that time – the SAS and SwissAir aircrew stayed in the Holiday in where I stayed. There wasn’t a pool at the Metropole, so the Lufthansa stewardesses came up and used the Holiday Inn pool.

You can read my photo essay of my Pakistani trip here

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