Shikarpur

Blackhole

Crime is happening in Sindh with the blessings of powerful hands in the background.

By Imran Jan | July 2021

A dying star eventually ends up becoming a blackhole, and becomes the centre of intense gravity, in fact, so intense that even light cannot escape it. That is pretty much what all humanity knows. Sindh for years, if not decades, has been the blackhole of criminality where morality comes to die never to be resurrected again. I grew up in Pakistan and during the 90s and the 2000s, it was common knowledge that many parts of the country were a no-go area unless one wanted to end up in deep trouble. Besides the border with Afghanistan, many parts of Sindh were a constant reminder of those dangerous places.

While the blackhole in the cosmos isn’t fully understood, the blackhole of Sindh absolutely is. The crime was and still is happening with the blessings of powerful hands in the background. That is why it has been such a rocket science to find a solution.

The Shikarpur incident where the kidnappers had many people in their custody, including Naqeebullah Pathan and Inayat Pathan, is another episode that serves to remind us that the law breakers are stronger than the law enforcers. The police went to recover the kidnapped through mediation. The dacoits attacked the police in their armoured personnel carriers (APCs) using anti-aircraft rockets. Their APCs were damaged and several policemen killed, including a photographer. It is a remarkable display of chutzpah to not only attack the police but attack them when they come in peace. It wasn’t some sort of a firefight or a police encounter. The kidnappers didn’t indulge in an act of self defence. This was pure and absolute impunity.

The criminals are not only stronger and supremely confident in their impunity than those whose job it is to stop their crime, but also safer and brash. The police might end up in trouble for fighting the crime such as the killing of the police officer who had caught Ayaan Ali red handed. Similarly, the drunken politician MPA Majeed Achakzai was acquitted after he ran over a traffic policeman on duty. There are countless other stories. The criminals come out clean and unscathed after killing law enforcement personnel. In our childhood stories, the good guy always won. In today’s practical and filthy stories of Sindh, no kid would want to grow up to be the good guy because that image is that of a loser whose life and death do not matter. Those who matter (powerful) do not care and those who care (relatives and loved ones) do not matter. The bad guy wins every time. Alas, we don’t have Dexter in Sindh.

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