A New Deal in Pakistan

Democracy has never thrived in Pakistan in part because landowning has traditionally been the social base from which most politicians emerge, especially in rural areas. Here Pakistan is quite different from India, where the urban middle class quickly gained control in 1947. That class has been largely excluded from Pakistan's political process, as, even more so, has the rural peasantry. There are no Pakistani equivalents of Indian peasant leaders such as ... Full Story »

Posted by Kaizar Campwala

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Review

Omar Khan
4.4
by Omar Khan - Oct. 1, 2008

It presents a delightfully different picture of Pakistan from those typically found in US publications. I am also a great fan of Dalrymple's excellent books. There is a bit too much optimism in the article though, and bits of facts missing. The ANP has not been in in opposition for nearly 50 years, it has been part of various governments since then. Its success is in part due to the usual way people have in the subcontinent and especially in Pakistan of throwing out those in power for not delivering. That said, it is a party with many virtues although the current leadership is a far cry from the original Red Shirts. Also, in all fairness, it was not the middle class in Pakistan which brought secular-leaning parties to power, but the vast lower, landless class that so outnumbers the middle class. Nonetheless, a fine corrective to the usual gibberish.

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