Can Pakistani 'VIPs' learn to wait in line? They may be forced to.
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| Karachi, Pakistan
Ordinary Pakistanis have long been annoyed at motorcades that hold up traffic for well-connected elites, and of street barricades that lead to politicians鈥 residences. But anger at what is dubbed the 鈥淰IP culture鈥 in Pakistan may be reaching a tipping point.
Last month, a video that聽 a Pakistan International Airlines flight went viral. The plane had been delayed to accommodate the late VIPs. This rare example of push back drew widespread TV coverage and debate about class divisions and poor governance.
Anger over Pakistan鈥檚 VIP culture is mainly about governance, says Ayesha Tammy Haq, a Karachi-based lawyer who hosts a political talk show. 鈥淚f you had a good governance system and provided services, people wouldn鈥檛 mind waiting,鈥 she says.
Basic sanitation and utilities are lacking in major cities like Karachi, and the educational and healthcare system are in a deplorable state. Reforms in these areas aren鈥檛 forthcoming, and the general state of insecurity contributes to a lack of faith in the government to enact any reforms.
Rare confrontation
After the airline video hit TV and exploded on Twitter and Facebook the man who filmed it, Arjumand Hussain, was fired from his job at an aviation and travel services company 鈥 which got him lionized online. (Mr. Hussian's company later claimed it did not fire him for shooting the video).
The video shows Rehman Malik, a senator and former cabinet minister, walking towards the airplane door 鈥 only to make a hasty retreat when he sees the angry passengers waiting for him to get on board.
鈥淵ou should go back. You should apologize to these passengers,鈥 yells an unidentified man in the video. 鈥淵ou should be ashamed of yourself鈥 250 passengers have had their time wasted because of you. It is your fault. You are not a minister anymore and even if you are a minister, we don鈥檛 care anymore!鈥
Exclusionary practices聽
Such confrontations are rare. When Mr. Malik was interior minister in the last Pakistan Peoples Party-led government, he was often satirized on television and provided fodder for online jokes. He once compared militants who . But politicians here are not usually on the receiving end of a diatribe like the one on board the PIA flight.
A PIA spokesperson said an investigation had been opened into the incident, and added that PIA flights are not delayed on the request of government officials 鈥 though anyone that has flown in South Asia knows that flights often do await the arrival of single passengers.聽
Yet, many of those complaining about Malik seem to have ignored other signs of apparent discrimination in Pakistan. After the video emerged online, Pakistani author and journalist Mohammed Hanif pointed out that those riled up are overlooking the fact that they, too, are better off than many who live in rural or poor areas. He 鈥淧eople demanding end to VIP culture at airports are right. It also seems they haven't seen much of Pakistan beyond airports.鈥
In Karachi, malls and restaurants practice exclusionary measures such as limiting the entrance of single men over the weekend. Last year, reports emerged of a French restaurant in Islamabad that unless they were accompanied by foreigners. On New Year鈥檚, the government closes off Karachi鈥檚 public beach and blocks routes leading to it with shipping containers so celebrators can't access the waterfront.聽
Class clashes聽
The anger at this VIP culture points to a very real problem in Pakistan: the vast differences between social classes.
Pakistan鈥檚 elite is estimated at 10 million people 鈥 6.4 per cent of its population 鈥 including 600,000 described as the most "privileged" in a study by the . Compared to this, at least one-third of Pakistan鈥檚 population 鈥 鈥 live below the United Nations鈥 poverty line of $1.25 per day.
Maintaining elite privileges often comes at the cost of protecting ordinary citizens. For example, a wall built outside former President Asif Ali Zardari鈥檚 house in Karachi鈥檚 Clifton area living nearby because a main road was downsized for the wall. Security personnel have been known to question residents about their visitors, and commercial activity in the neighborhood has been affected.
With over 30 percent of Karachi鈥檚 police force on "" 鈥 deployed at the residences of politicians and government officials 鈥 the city is left without a fully functioning police force.
Much of the VIP culture has been created because of the state of insecurity in Pakistan: there are scores of politicians who have been threatened by militants and rely on the government to provide them with some form of protection.聽But others say that the government should be doing more to serve all Pakistanis, such as ensuring that the police to citizen ratio is higher. 聽
鈥淚 think it鈥檚 time for people to stand up for their rights,鈥澛爏aid Frieha Altaf, who runs an event management company in Karachi. She said more people needed to call out VIPs publicly for their behavior, like when they block off roads. She likened VIP culture to that of gangsters because of the high-handed nature and sense of impunity that both have in Pakistan. 鈥淩ehman Malik should have apologized,鈥 she says.
While it is unlikely that Malik鈥檚 public humiliation will deter others from throwing their weight around or holding up traffic, he may have learned a lesson from the video.
Ms.聽Haq recalled catching a flight to Islamabad a week after the video featuring the legislators emerged. 鈥淓veryone got up when they announced boarding. Malik was among them 鈥 and he was very good natured, allowing people to take selfies with him and smiling,鈥 she said.
鈥淭here were other members of the National Assembly and Senators and they were on time too. I think people felt that [the video] had made a difference.鈥