Gulf state religious moderation falls by the wayside in Pakistan
By James M. Dorsey
Silent about rising sectarian violence in Pakistan, Gulf
states vying for religious soft power risk exposing the limitations of their
concepts of an undefined ‘moderate’ Islam that is tolerant and endorses
pluralism.
Countries like Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates
and Qatar have so far turned a blind eye to mounting sectarian sentiment in
Karachi and Punjab province against Shiites and Ahmadis, sects viewed as
heretics by conservative Sunni Muslims.
Saudi
Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan appears to
have passed on the opportunity to demonstrate the kingdom’s claim to leadership
of a Muslim world that adopts principles of religious tolerance and pluralism
when he apparently refrained from raising increased sectarian violence in talks
with Prime Minister Imran Khan and Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi during
a visit to Pakistan last month.
The Gulf states’ silence is the latest example of a
geopolitics and economics-driven refusal to speak out on repression of or
discrimination against Muslims in various parts of the world, including China’s
north-western province of Xinjiang and India.
The silence is particularly noticeable given that the
Gulf states have greater influence in Pakistan than in either China or India
and in some cases bare a degree of historic responsibility for developments in
the world’s second most populous Muslim-majority country. Pakistan is home to
the world’s largest Shiite Muslim majority.
The refusal to speak out highlights the utility of
rival religious soft power efforts, not only by the Gulf states but also by
Turkey and Iran that often in the case of the energy-rich monarchies seem
primarily designed to curry favor with Western governments and influential
Jewish and Christian communities and employ their status as models of a vaguely
defined form of ‘moderate’ Islam to position themselves as rival leaders of the
Muslim world.
Gulf states likely refrained from standing up for an
Islam in Pakistan that embraces minority strands of the faith because it may be
interpreted as a goodwill gesture towards Iran. In failing to do so, Gulf
states missed an opportunity to dial down tensions in the Middle East.
Saudi Arabia’s refraining from raising the issue is particularly
significant given the kingdom’s past support for militant anti-Shiite groups in
Pakistan and harsh anti-blasphemy legislation that carries the death penalty.
Saudi Arabia, in contrast to UAE and Qatar, has so far
passed on providing humanitarian aid to Iran to cope with the coronavirus
pandemic. Iran has been hard hit by the pandemic because of government
mismanagement and harsh US economic sanctions.
The failure to speak out about sectarian violence in
Pakistan also constitutes a missed Saudi opportunity to put the kingdom’s best
foot forward as US President-elect Joe Biden prepares to take office. Mr. Biden
is anticipated to adopt a more critical attitude towards Saudi Arabia compared
to his predecessor, Donald J. Trump.
“I don’t expect anything from Saudis. The militants
are an asset for the Saudis as well as the Pakistanis. They have no interest in
cracking down on these organizations given geopolitics,” said Jaffer A. Mirza,
a London-based researcher focused on religious minorities in Pakistan.
Saudi reluctance to speak out against sectarianism
played into the hands of Mr. Khan, who has failed to condemn mass protests that
denounced Shiites as “blasphemers” and “infidels” and called for their
beheading. Nor has Mr. Khan taken issues with the mushrooming number of
blasphemy cases being filed against Shiites in the courts.
Orthodox Sunni Muslims accuse Shiites of blasphemy by
refusing to recognize the three ‘righteous’ Caliphs that immediately succeeded
Mohammed because they believe that the Prophet’s son-in-law, Ali, was deprived
of his right to lead the Muslim community. It is that belief that gave birth to
Shiism.
Pakistani officials have blamed the mounting tension
on increased militancy among Shiite groups supported by neighboring Iran. In
August, the government banned a little known group, Khatam-Ul-Ambia, on charges that it was recruiting
Pakistani Shiites, on behalf of the Iran’s Revolutionary Guards Corps, to fight
in Syria alongside Iranian forces supporting President Bashar al-Assad.
The anti-Shiite campaign is waged among others by Ahl-e-Sunnat-Wal-Jamaat
(ASWJ), the successor to the outlawed, anti-Shiite group,
Sipah-e-Sahaba that was long backed by Saudi Arabia in its effort to counter
the appeal of Iran’s Islamic revolution as well as its sway among Pakistani
Shiites.
A ban
on ASWJ, that supported Mr. Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf
(PTI) party in the 2018 election, was lifted at the time.
Asked in 2016 about Saudi support for his group, ASWJ
leader Muhammad Ahmed Ludhianvi said over a lunch of chicken,
vegetables and rice: “Some things are natural. It’s like when two Pakistanis
meet abroad or someone from Jhang meets another person from Jhang in Karachi.
It’s natural to be closest to the people with whom we have similarities… We are
the biggest anti-Shiite movement in Pakistan.”
Mr. Ludhianvi was invited three years later to attend
a Saudi
embassy-hosted reception in honor of the visiting imam of the
Ka’ba in Mecca, Sheikh Dr Abdullah Awad Al-Juhany, at a time that the ASWJ
leader was calling for the killing of
Shiites.
A Shiite
news network published pictures of an alleged meeting between
Saudi ambassador to Pakistan, Nawaf bin Saeed Al-Maliki, and Mr. Ludhianvi last
September.
The rising sectarian tensions in Pakistan raise the
specter of the South Asian state becoming again the venue of a low-intensity
Saudi Iranian war similar to violence that erupted in the 1980s and 1990s and
in more recent years against Hazara Shiites in the province of Balochistan that
borders on Iran.
Pakistani Sunni Muslim militants asserted in 2017 that
Saudi
money was pouring into militant anti-Shiite religious
seminaries that dot the triangle where the borders of Iran, Pakistan and
Afghanistan meet.
Hazara
Shiite protesters this week refused to bury ten coal
miners who were kidnapped and executed on Sunday by the Islamic State in a bid
to force the government to take responsibility for their protection and
bringing the perpetrators to justice.
Unconvinced by promises made by Interior Minister
Sheikh Ahmed Rasheed, the protesters demanded that Mr. Khan personally come to
talk to them.
In response Mr.
Khan tweeted on Wednesday: “I want to reassure the Hazara
families who lost their loved ones…that I am cognizant of their suffering &
their demands. We are taking steps to prevent such attacks in the future &
know our neighbor is instigating this sectarian terrorism.”
The government, rather than acknowledging the attack
as part of renewed sectarian violence that is not only on the rise but also
being further institutionalized, blamed the violence on nationalist Baloch
insurgents allegedly supported by India.
The government has long sought to counter Baloch
nationalism and separatism by supporting militant Sunni Muslim groups in the
province.
Militants, believed to be Baloch nationalists, raided
a security outpost in the remote Harnai district of Balochistan, killing at
least seven paramilitary soldiers and wounding several others days before the
latest attack on the Hazaras.
Discrimination of Shiites and Ahmadis was further
institutionalized with a law passed in July by the Punjab regional assembly
that exclusively adopted ultra-conservative Sunni precepts.
Critics, including Pakistani
Minister for Science and Technology Fawad Chaudhry, warned that
the law would “plunge us deep into sectarianism and religious extremism.”
The
critics noted that various stipulations of the law such as
the banning of allegedly derogatory remarks against holy personages and hate
speech, censorship of publications, and the duty to refer to the finality of
the Prophet when referring to Prophet Mohammed, were already part of earlier
legislation.
“There has been a deafening silence by the elite
moderate Sunnis of our country over the increase in prejudice against Shias,”
wrote a Pakistani
Shiite, who is considering seeking asylum abroad. He could
have said the same thing about major Sunni Muslim contenders for religious soft
power in bids to become or cement their status as leaders of the Muslim world.
A podcast
version of this story is available on Soundcloud, Itunes, Spotify, Stitcher, TuneIn, Spreaker, Pocket Casts, Tumblr, Podbean, Audecibel, Patreon and Castbox.
Dr. James
M. Dorsey is an award-winning journalist and a senior fellow at Nanyang
Technological University’s S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies in
Singapore and the National University of Singapore’s Middle East Institute.
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