Smokers’ Corner: Narrative chaos
I am always baffled by the rather surreal ways competing discourses and narratives emerge during a political crisis in Pakistan. In theory, it should not be a baffling occurrence, really, because the contents and trajectories of these discourses remain more or less the same. Nevertheless, it never ceases to amaze no matter how predictable its emergence and outcome, especially when crises are unfolding on the streets.
As if on cue, the first utterance in this context is almost always, “Yeh sab hukumat khud karwa rahi hai [The government itself is engineering this crisis].” This often comes from opposition groups, some populist media personnel and those who are not such great fans of a sitting government. Equally on cue, then comes a spat of desperate statements from the government. “Some malicious hand is behind this crisis.” The malicious hand soon turns into a “foreign hand” which ultimately morphs into an “Indian hand.” Not far behind in bringing to light its own take on things comes the initial statements from the state and/or the so-called establishment: “We will not let anyone destabilise the integrity and sovereignty of the country. We hope the crisis is resolved in a peaceful manner.”
It is never made clear — at least not in a very convincing or even in any rational manner — just why would a hukumat [government] engineer a crisis against itself? Or how does a malicious/foreign hand always so easily and conveniently manage to plot multiple political commotions in the presence of the numerous security and intelligence agencies operating in Pakistan?
Explanations that emerge during a political crisis in Pakistan predictably evolve but make no logical sense
Well, this is when that other narrative begins to appear: ‘Yeh sab agencies karwa rahien hain [All this is being engineered by the intelligence agencies].’ The establishment is quick to retaliate: “The agencies have nothing to do with this. They stand with the government and the state against any or all aggression against Pakistan.” The reasons given for the “the agencies are doing it” narrative have something to do with the establishment undermining a government or punishing it for undermining the establishment, or something of the sort. This impression often comes from certain quarters within the government or from those opposed to the establishment’s political disposition. The disposition is never quite explained.
As the crisis intensifies and the government begins to panic, the discourses begin to mutate. “This is all being engineered by the government itself” evolves (or devolves) into one which begins to sympathise with those on the streets and puts the blame on the government’s utter incompetence in handling the crisis. Logically, this should mean that a crisis which was engineered by the government itself has gone out of its hands or the government is purposely letting it get out of control. To what end? This is beside the point because, by now, the illogic of yeh sab hukumat khud karwa rahi hai has mutated into a castigation of the government’s handling of the crisis.
So the new logic in this context should suggest that it wasn’t really the government that had engineered the crisis for some Machiavellian political gain, but it was the regime’s overall incompetence and bad policies that made people pour out on the streets and create a commotion? Yes, something like that.
On the other hand, the government’s narrative begins to transmutate as well. The knee-jerk ‘foreign hand’ narrative suddenly goes out the window as the government now decides to hold peaceful negotiations with the commotion-makers. The regime now describes them as ‘patriotic Pakistanis’ who have been ‘misguided’. By whom? That’s beside the point because it can’t be a foreign hand anymore, otherwise that would make the protesters traitors and not patriotic Pakistanis (albeit misguided ones).
The establishment applauds the move and also describes the protesters as patriotic Pakistanis, but reminds everyone that it will not let anyone destabilise the integrity and sovereignty of the country, etc. But
by now one is not quite sure who is trying to destabilise Pakistan? Those on the streets or those in the government? It can’t be any of the two because both are now negotiating a way out of the crisis — an act applauded by the establishment.