The Global Social Network
Eclipse of Feudalism in Pakistan
By Arif Hasan
Mechanisation and middlemen: A customised tractor with a trailer full of harvested sugarcane, in Pakistan.
http://himalmag.com/component/content/article/5126-the-eclipse-of-f...
Here's an AFP story about love online in Pakistani town of Muzaffargarh:
MUZAFFARABAD: Sania was just a schoolgirl when she logged onto an Internet chat room and met a young college student called Mohammad. They fell in love and decided to get married.
Internet dating in the West is now so common that it is no longer considered an act of shameful desperation but an acceptable way for busy professionals to discover a like-minded partner.
But for Sania, the 22-year-old daughter of a conservative truck driver in Pakistan, online romance and her subsequent marriage has meant repeated beatings and death threats at the hands of her relatives.
“No one gets married outside our community. It is our tradition,” Sania told AFP. She is from the garrison city of Rawalpindi and Mohammad comes from Muzaffarabad, the capital of Pakistani-administered Kashmir.
At first she and Mohammad chatted online. Then they both bought mobiles to continue their relationship by telephone. For several years they asked their parents for permission to marry, but were refused.
So Sania decided to escape.
She packed a bag and sneaked out while her brother was at school, her mother sleeping and her father out at work. She took the bus straight to Muzaffarabad.
“I spent the four-hour journey in fear. I kept thinking that if my family caught me, they’d kill me,” she told AFP.
In Muzaffarabad, Mohammad met her off the bus and they got married immediately. But while his family quickly accepted Sania, nearly two years later the couple still live in fear of her relatives.
Twice they have dragged her back to Rawalpindi since her marriage and have demanded repeatedly that she break off relations with Mohammad.
“Last time they took me back three months ago and put lot of pressure on me to break off this relationship. I got in contact with my husband and asked him to fetch me. I escaped from the house at midnight and we managed to flee,” she said.
Now Sania and her 24-year-old husband have moved to a new one-room house in a slum, changed their phone number and dare not venture out of the city.
“They say they will kill us whenever they find us,” Sania says.
Women in Pakistan who marry against the wishes of their parents are ostracised or even killed by male relatives for supposedly bringing dishonour on the family.
But online relationships are a new phenomenon.
---
Mohammad Zaman, professor of sociology at Quaid-e-Azam University in Islamabad, who has written a book about marriage, says arranged unions that have dominated for centuries are on the wane.
“Internet marriage is a new trend emerging in Pakistan. Technological advancement has entered into our homes and traditional taboos are slowly vanishing in educated and affluent families,” Zaman told AFP.
Online, they can share personal information and swap photographs — things that would be restricted or prohibited in the traditional selection of partners.
The Internet is changing mindsets, giving young people freedom and privacy, and a forum to discuss matters frowned upon by Pakistan’s traditional, conservative society.
“There is a kind of emancipation in society and young people want their say in the selection of their future partner,” Zaman said, although he conceded that parents find it easier to accept a son’s choice than that of a daughter.
Tahir, a Pakistani peace activist, knows only too well how the freedom of the Internet can collide with the restrictions of everyday life — not only conservative sensibilities but politics and war.
The 26-year-old fell for university student Nazia on Facebook and Skype.
All fine and good, except that Nazia lives on the other side of one of the most heavily militarised borders in the world — that which divides the Himalayan region of Kashmir between India and Pakistan.
--
http://dawn.com/2012/12/16/love-online-challenges-pakistan-taboos/
The "peace of the dead" is ending with the "eclipse of feudalism" in Pakistan. What we are seeing now is an "unplanned revolution" in the words of a Pakistani sociologist, a revolution that is transforming Pakistan for the better in the long run.
http://books.google.com/books?id=EKHZAAAAMAAJ&q=feudalism#searc...
http://himalmag.com/component/content/article/5126-the-eclipse-of-f...
http://himalmag.com/component/content/article/5126-the-eclipse-of-f...
http://sai.columbia.edu/outreach_files/Social%20&%20Structural%...
Here's an Express Tribune list of Pakistani companies with over a billion in revenue:
The Billion Dollar Club
1. Pakistan State Oil Company
Revenues: $11.57 billion
Joined club: Before 1986
2. Pak-Arab Refinery
Revenues: $3.00 billion
Joined club: 2000
3. Sui Northern Gas Pipelines
Revenues: $2.52 billion
Joined club: 2004
4. Shell Pakistan
Revenues: $2.38 billion
Joined club: 2000
5. Oil & Gas Development Company
Revenues: $2.23 billion
Joined club: 2005
6. National Refinery
Revenues: $1.97 billion
Joined club: 2005
7. Hub Power Company
Revenues: $1.97 billion
Joined club: 2009
8. Karachi Electric Supply Company
Revenues: $1.84 billion
Joined club: 2008
9. Attock Refinery
Revenues: $1.74 billion
Joined club: 2008
10. Attock Petroleum
Revenues: $1.72 billion
Joined club: 2010
11. Lahore Electric Supply Company
Revenues: $1.49 billion
Joined club: 2006
12. Pakistan Refinery
Revenues: $1.44 billion
Joined club: 2011
13. Sui Southern Gas Company
Revenues: $1.38 billion
Joined club: 2005
14. Pakistan International Airlines
Revenues: $1.36 billion
Joined club: 2005
15. Engro Corporation
Revenues: $1.29 billion
Joined club: 2011
16. Pakistan Telecommunications Company
Revenues: $1.25 billion
Joined club: 2000
17. Kot Addu Power Company
Revenues: $1.14 billion
Joined club: 2012
18. Mobilink
Revenues: $1.11 billion
Joined club: 2006
19. Pakistan Petroleum
Revenues: $1.09 billion
Joined club: 2012
.
http://tribune.com.pk/story/483287/corporate-revenues-the-growth-of...
Here's ET on near billion dollar Pak companies:
The Near-Billion Dollar club
1. Telenor Pakistan
Revenues: $951 million
2. Pepsico Pakistan
Revenues: $922 million
3. State Life Insurance Corporation
Revenues: $885 million
4. Toyota Indus
Revenues: $869 million
5. Habib Bank
Revenues: $831 million
6. Nestle Pakistan
Revenues: $804 million
7. National Bank of Pakistan
Revenues: $781 million
8. Faisalabad Electric Supply Company
Revenues: $775 million
9. Multan Electric Power Company
Revenues: $761 million
10. Unilever Pakistan
Revenues: $746 million
11. Pakistan Tobacco Company
Revenues: $728 million
12. Pak Suzuki
Revenues: $713 million
13. Islamabad Electric Supply Company
Revenues: $681 million
14. Fauji Fertilizer Company
Revenues: $634 million
15. Lotte Pakistan
Revenues: $624 million
16. United Bank
Revenues: $622 million
17. MCB Bank
Revenues: $617 million
.
tribune.com.pk/story/483448/rising-tide-consumer-centric-companies-dominate-the-near-billion-dollar-club/
Here's an interesting piece in <a href="http://f5web1.economist.com/news/asia/21578104-wrestlers-son-overthrows-landed-gentry-gone-wind">The Economist</a> on decline of feudal power in Pakistan:
<i>A wrestler’s son overthrows the landed gentry
May 18th 2013 | LAHORE
Jamshed Dasti takes success on the chin
Pakistan’s waning feudalism
A wrestler’s son overthrows the landed gentry
JAMSHED DASTI is tired but triumphant. “This is a revolution,” he says. “These feudals never before considered poor people to be even human.” Speaking on May 13th from Muzaffargarh, in south Punjab, he had much to crow about. The son of an illiterate wrestler had just inflicted a humiliating political defeat on the patriarch of a hitherto unassailable clan of landed gentry.
Ghulam Rabbani Khar is head of a family that owns 600 hectares (1,500 acres) in cotton country and is powerful in the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP). His daughter, Hina Rabbani Khar, was foreign minister in the last government. She did not stand for election, but her father was thrashed, with less than half Mr Dasti’s 100,000-plus votes.
Mr Dasti, in his 30s, quotes Marxist poetry and rides a donkey cart. He ran as an independent, and Mr Khar was not his only obstacle. In April a court imposed a three-year jail sentence for claiming a fake degree; the sentence was later scrapped. He has faced dozens of criminal cases, speaks no English and is variously described as a “thug” or Pakistan’s answer to Robin Hood.
His victory, he claims, is proof of an “awakening consciousness” against feudal bosses. They used to instruct villagers how to vote. Now voters are more mobile and sometimes better educated. Electronic media, even in rural corners, have helped change attitudes.
In Punjab the PPP is destroyed. Elsewhere the gentry hang on; in Sindh, landed families got out the votes for the PPP. But politics is being reshaped. Ijaz Gilani, a pollster in Islamabad, says populist figures like Mr Dasti fill “vacuums” formed as labour-intensive plantations decline, cotton farming modernises and old families lose clout.
Villagers need someone to help them deal with police, teachers and other bits of the state. The local press makes much of Mr Dasti’s readiness, even at night, to jump on his cart to help troubled constituents. He made his name during floods in 2010. He set up a free ambulance service and a bus that, at times, he drives himself. Deference, he says, is out.</i>
http://f5web1.economist.com/news/asia/21578104-wrestlers-son-overth...
Change is most difficult to recognize when it is actually happening.
It can often resemble chaos, even to those who demand it loudest.
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