SOCMM12 and the ban on shiakilling.com – by Karrar Hussain
The two-day Pak-India Social Media Mela (SOCMM12) was held in Karachi on July 13-14, hosted by the US Consulate General in collaboration with a non-governmental organization‚ Peace Niche. As to what were the requisites for the participation is something that we do not know. But in the words of Abdul Majeed, one of the participants, it was an invite-only affair and most people who were invited were recommended by other people’.
The event coincided with an unannounced ban by Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) on the shiakilling.com, a website that keeps the tally of unabated Shia killings in Pakistan. The ban was an unjustifiable since NO hate-websites run by the proscribed sectarian organizations like SSP/LeJ and others have been subject to this action. Thus it had to be condemned outrightly, and protested simultaneously. Be that as it may, shockingly, or probably quite predictably, no one among this famous club of bloggers/anaysts and others of that influential ilk could be heard/read/seen condeming the act in the SOCMM12. Except a token tweet by only one or two, most were silent on this issue. Instead, all that we saw were exchanges of pleasantries among the excited participants about each other, and shameful flattery of Senator Rehman Malik (Interior Minister) who was ultimately responsible for violent police action on Shia bloggers in Karachi. If one were to review their TLs (Timlines) on Twitter of the two days, the entire focus seemed to be expanding the circle of influence, making and winning new friends with all those reciprocal compliments and eulogies. When I speak of these compliments, I am referring to the (participants’) tweets of the two days by the time SOCMM12 concluded.
Important to note here, which I woud like to call the most salient aspect of unfolding events, was the protest (via tweets) that we witnessed on Twitter. Here was a big number of people, who might not be as influential as those in SOCMM12, that did not stop raising their voice on the issue, exhibiting their concern and outrage in an examplarly civil manner. All these people were conveying their sentiments to both local and international audience because they found the action unjust, indefensible and biased. The whole exercise was meant to draw the attention of everyone (at least) on Twitter, especially the civil society memebers, media, human rights organizations, activists, and those who represent the federal government on media to this ban.
But while the tweets have had their own significance, it was the practical demonstration of the sentiments that mattered the most. This entailed the protest of Shia groups in Karachi who came out on the streets to show the world that they stood for a cause, a cause that centers around justice, a cause that speaks for the unheard, a cause that highlights the plights and devastation of abandoned and persecuted. And a cause that has no monetary benefits, a cause that doesn’t please the ‘power that be’, a cause that does not win them a circle of friends, a cause that does not necessarily win admiration of those ‘who matter’. So when such a cause is meted out the treatement that the protest did (remember the protesters being thrashed and dispersed with tear gas and aerial firing?), do NOT be shocked.
Meanwhile, the SOCMM12, which did not bother to weigh up banning of the website in all the discussions during those two days, would hardly feel the need of any protest on the streets. (Also there was no critical debate on the general apathy, silence and misrepresentation of Shia genocide in Pakistan’s mainstream and social media.) Probably, there was hardly any reason for them to at least go to the Karachi Press Club with a few placards, banners, chanting a few slogans, or at least ‘one minute silence’. Let that go. Should we not ask if anyone, of all the participants here wrote a single article or blog post condemning the ban on shiakilling.com? Nothing. I will be thankful if you link me to any blog or article wherein they have raised the issue. Yes, I did see the famous right activists, in fact everyone comfortably ensconced there, speaking for, and writing blogs/articles against, the dangerous phenomenon of ‘trolls’ who are a permanent bane for all our ‘famous people’ on Twitter.
They all came, sat, watched, listened, talked, smiled, chuckled, laughed, ate, drank, enjoyed and left. On the other hand, the protesters on the streets had to run here and there to escape shelling, roughing up and arrest. Whatever happened, the world at the end saw who stood for what all this while.
Some people may resent this post, call it a one-sided skewed analysis, or – more impolitely, a trash. But I have strictly kept my focus on the two somehow associated events. I have deliberately avoided numerous other shortcomings on the SOCMM12’s part, and the participants.
Let the readers be the final judge.
P.S. We owe a special thanks to all our Shia, Sunni, Ahmadi, Baloch, Pashtun, Christians, Hindu and all other justice-loving people/groups around the world for raising their voice on this issue.
P.S.S. IS there a paucity of critics in Pakistan now? Not even a single critique of the whole event by the learned participants on any famous blog/s newspaper/s other than LUBP?
It’s simple. Fake civil society (FCS) owns fake social media (FSM).
Amazingly social media is dominated by the same people who dominate the mainstream media.
SOCMM12 was anything but alternative media.
A picture is worth a thousand words.
Nice picture, Mr. Haider Karrar. It says the whole story.
beena sarwar @beenasarwar
Let’s give credit where it’s due. It was @SenRehmanMalik who looked into it when it was brought to his notice and took action
beena sarwar @beenasarwar
Good to know via @AliAbbasTaj that the blocked Shia killings site has been opened http://bit.ly/NDD8wH Thanks @SenRehmanMalik #Pakistan
Ali Taj @AliAbbasTaj
@beenasarwar @aliarqam So until we know who killed Babur Wali and Shezad Saleem I will encourage anonymous analysis.
Expand
Reply Retweet Favorite
26 Jul Ali Arqam @aliarqam
@AliAbbasTaj You got it wrong man, have no problem with anonymity, a known tactic of activists, was talking abt other BS @beenasarwar
Expand
Reply Retweet Favorite
27 Jul beena sarwar @beenasarwar
@aliarqam @AliAbbasTaj Anonymity is ok, may be necessary to protect lives. But not when used to hide behind for personal attacks & lies.
Expand
Reply Retweet Favorite
27 Jul Ali Taj @AliAbbasTaj
@beenasarwar @aliarqam everyone has an opinion. I admire #LUBP and #PB for their work on #ShiaGenocide, so do you. Else is opinion
Ali Taj @AliAbbasTaj
@beenasarwar @aliarqam Imam Ali said “Do not look at who is saying it, but rather look at whats being said”.
beena sarwar @beenasarwar
@aliarqam I thought they’d decided to be more responsible but apparently they are incapable of it. Too bad. @AliAbbasTaj
Ali Arqam @aliarqam
@beenasarwar Hope, they can understand, their behaviour is not helping them in any way, may @AliAbbasTaj put some sense into it
Rehman Malik’s services to Shia bloggers have been recorded in this post: http://t.co/whyc7O8F
This is how Rehman Malik reacted when Shia bloggers came on roads. http://youtu.be/fc2usEra61w and https://t.co/Xr5NHWQg
Fake Social Media of #FCS: http://pakistanblogzine.wordpress.com/2012/07/13/some-pictures-of-social-media-mela-2012-socmm12/ vs Real Social Media: http://youtu.be/fc2usEra61w #Pakistan
The current problem in Pakistan is far greater than any other problems in Pakistan and very few Pakistani wish to talk about it probably due to some fear. The daily slaughter of Pakistanis by lawless terrorists. They cannot stop it because large number of Pakistanis is sympathizers and supporters of terrorists as they are providing shelter to them and hide them in their communities. Government is afraid to go all out against terrorists due to fear of civil war. It would be a miracle if Pakistan will ever return to a country without daily bloodshed.
The most important issue at this time is to stop bloodshed in Pakistan, not incompetency of political leaders, stealing of wealth, bribery, black market, rising cost of sugar, lack of health care, lack of education, lack of housing and all sorts of problems that have nothing to do with bloodshed that is taking place in Pakistan. There are many countries in the world much poorer than Pakistan with much more incompetent leaders but we do not hear wholesale blood bath on daily basis.
Karrar, this is an excellent article! Thank you for renewing my faith that there are ppl in Pakistan who care. Who are not afraid to speak the truth even if it hurts them. People like Ravez Junejo and you renew my confidence that we have bold, intelligent and articulate people like you to say it like it is and expose this apathy of our fake civil society to #ShiaGenocide.
Spot on. Excellent.
Bhai Sahib, it was your PPP government which assaulted the Shia protesters in Karachi. It was not PML-N or Sipa-e-Sahaba who did that.