Archive for the ‘Pakistan’ Category

The Last Empire: China’s Pollution Problem Goes Global

Monday, December 17th, 2007

A friend of ours in Marin, Jacques Leslie, author of Deep Water: The Epic Struggle over Dams, Displaced People and the Environment, has a piece in Mother Jones about China, the great dragon soon to out-eat the great eagle and then, with other globalvores, the nest we all call home….

In a mere two and a half decades, China has awakened from Maoist stagnancy to become the world’s manufacturer. Among the planet’s 193 nations, it is now first in production of coal, steel, cement, and 10 kinds of metal; it produces half the world’s cameras and nearly a third of its TVs, and by 2015 may produce the most cars. It boasts factories that can accommodate 200,000 workers, and towns that make 60 percent of the world’s buttons, half the world’s silk neckties, and half the world’s fireworks, respectively.

China has also become a ravenous consumer. Its appetite for raw materials drives up international commodity prices and shipping rates while its middle class, projected to jump from fewer than 100 million people now to 700 million by 2020, is learning the gratifications of consumerism. China is by a wide margin the leading importer of a cornucopia of commodities, including iron ore, steel, copper, tin, zinc, aluminum, and nickel. It is the world’s biggest consumer of coal, refrigerators, grain, cell phones, fertilizer, and television sets. It not only leads the world in coal consumption, with 2.5 billion tons in 2006, but uses more than the next three highest-ranked nations—the United States, Russia, and India—combined. China uses half the world’s steel and concrete and will probably construct half the world’s new buildings over the next decade. So omnivorous is the Chinese appetite for imports that when the country ran short of scrap metal in early 2004, manhole covers disappeared from cities all over the world—Chicago lost 150 in a month. And the Chinese are not just vast consumers, but conspicuous ones, as evidenced by the presence in Beijing of dealers representing every luxury-car manufacturer in the world. Sales of Porsches, Ferraris, and Maseratis have flourished, even though their owners have no opportunity to test their finely tuned cars’ performance on the city’s clotted roads.

Pakistan: What is Going On?

Monday, May 14th, 2007
General Strike Pakistan

Bob Zuber has been keeping readers current with the outbreaks over the weekend in Karachi, Pakistan — which have now exploded into a General Strike in many parts of the country.

On the surface it appears to be a confrontation between lawyers and barristers supporting the suspended Chief Justice, Mohammed Chaudhry and Pakistan’s boss, General Musharaff, who took power in a coup in 1999. The Chaudhry supporters are implicity and explicitly at times, a re-democratizing force, though they claim to have no other end than restoring and ensuring the independence of the Judiciary. Zahid Hussain for the Times Online advances us this view of the story.

However, there is always more to be seen. The MQM (Muttahida Quami Movement) is the main political support / street presence for Musharraf. Those with allegiance to the MQM are in the great majority Urdu speaking Mohajirs, Muslims, who fled to Pakistan during the Partition of India in 1947. Opposing the MQM and Musharraf for an entire panoply of reasons are Pashtun Pakistanis (with wide spread family and cultural ties in Afghanistan) organized by the Awami National Party (ANP), in a united front with, among others, the Mutahida Majls-e-Amal, an opposition coalition of hard-line religious parties including Jamaat-e-Islami, thePakistan People’s Party (PPP), the Pakistan Muslim League, the Awami National Party and Sunni Tehreek, an organization in an off-shoot movement of Sunni Islam.

Relevant articles are here at NewKerala.com and in this AP article by Zarar Kahn.

The picture is not pretty. Very fundamentalist religious operators are joining relatively secular law practitioners in anger over Musharraf — in a country with a savage history of sectarian violence, and in possession — some many possessions?– of nuclear weaponry. The US of course, having relied heavily on Musharraf in the Bush defined war on terror, is adding to its burden of guilt in the eyes of those opposed to Musharraf, as well as not having a very realistic Plan B, should he fall.

Pakistan: Trouble in the Streets

Sunday, March 25th, 2007

The street scenes in Pakistan, of lawyers in three-piece suits braving tear gas and calling for the end of Pervez Musharraf’s regime have not slowed down. Announcements of Bar strikes have been issued in Lahore and (about 6) judges have resigned in protest against Musharaff’s suspension of Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry. A new Chief Justice, Rana Bhagwandas, a Hindu in the majority Muslim Pakistan was sworn in on Saturday. Chaudhry says he has confidence in Bhagwandas’ impartiality as he sets about to review the charges.

Nicholas Kristof at the NYT (reg.req) reveals details I hadn’t heard before: that the case being considered by Chaudhry when he got sacked was about “disappearances” carried out by the Pakistan military under Musharaff’s control. One disappearance in particular:

“The nation is ready to rise up; there is a revolution behind me,” says Amina Masood Janjua, a mother of three who has emerged as a nemesis of General Musharraf. Mrs. Janjua says she was a “very timid person,” uninvolved in politics and content to be “queen of my house.” But then two years ago, her husband disappeared, presumably kidnapped by government security agents.

A decidedly pugnacious column in India’s Central Chronicle reminds readers of the tight relationship between the U.S. and Musharraf and that it may now becoming unravelled. Given the mis-step with Chaudhry every opposition element in Pakistan is trying to seize the moment. India needs to keep a watchful eye, writes Chintamani Mahapatra.