249. Tear gas and three piece suits
Admittedly, the following news story would get better traction in American media if San Francisco, the site of the American Bar Association's 2007 annual meeting, were substituted for Lahore:
Aristotle divided the world of poetry into the comic, the tragic and the epic. Here in America, lawyers, whenever they gather in large groups, show a strong preference for the comic. The ABA's House of Delegates, for example, is reliably good for a laugh, although it's the same joke every year: the cosmic disparity between the delegates' self-importance and the utter indifference of everybody else in the world.
In Pakistan, however, it's not yet certain if we're in the midst of a tragedy or an epic. The Sydney Morning Herald has a striking photo of tear-gassed suited lawyers bathing their eyes in a public fountain, dating from yesterday's second day of rioting. The Morning Herald also provides some much-needed background for those of us coming late to the story:
Pakistan's English-language paper Dawn is all over the story, with at least six articles in today's edition. Bloggers have picked it up, with Swaraaj Chauhan at The Moderate Voice providing an overview and a link to an extremely useful, short background article from the South Asia Analysis Group. It should not be surprising that the story intertwines at least three familiar Pakistani themes: corruption; military dominance of government; and CIA / al Qaeda. A long list of possible explanations - politics is not simple in Pakistan - is offered at Chowrangi.
Mayank Austen Soofi at Blogcritics tells President Musharraf how he can still save the situation. (I like the name of Soofi's own blog, Ruined by Reading, and can recommend his compilation of sex tips from Jane Austen.) (Come to think of it, isn't "Austen" an unusual middle name in New Dehli?) And speaking of unusual names, Teeth Maestro lays it all out in a single breathless sentence:
"So," the Maestro adds, "he took a swipe at the Supreme Court." My personal feeling is that Musharraf honestly believed it was going to be like easy play dead dogie style rampage, he's getting what he deserved.


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