Illustration by Abro
On January 22 this year, members of two student outfits clashed at the Punjab University (PU), the largest state-owned educational institution in the Punjab. The conflict — which left eight students injured — involved youth belonging to the Islami Jamiat Taleba (IJT) and the Pakhtun Baloch Students Union (PBSU). The IJT is affiliated with the country’s mainstream religious outfit the Jamaat-i-Islami (JI), whereas the PBSU claims to be an independent student council of Pakhtun and Baloch students studying at PU.
For decades, PU has been in the news due to similar clashes. In 2009, while doing research for a paper on student politics in Pakistan (Student Politics in Pakistan: A Lament, Celebration & History), I went through numerous reports on student union elections and campus violence documented in newspapers between the mid-1960s and the 1990s. I had largely focused my research in this context on PU and the Karachi University (KU). Regarding student union elections and violence across the decades, the only constant (at PU) was the IJT.
In the late 1960s, IJT’s main opponents at PU were the left-wing National Students Federation (NSF) and the ‘Maoist’ National Students Organisation (NSO). In the 1970s, the NSO withered away and was replaced by ‘progressive’ student alliances mainly made up of NSF factions, Peoples Students Federation (PSF) — the student wing of the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) — and independent liberal student groups.
With politics so deeply entrenched in our system, can universities be an exception?
Between the late 1970s and the early 1980s, such alliances included the PSF, the Istaqlal Students Federation (ISF) — the student wing of Asghar Khan’s Tehreek-i-Istaqlal (TI) — and a radical leftist student outfit called the Black Eagles. In the 1990s, it was the student wing of the Pakistan Muslim League, the Muslim Students Federation (MSF). Even though violence during student union elections was common in the 1970s and early 1980s at PU, it hardly ever included firearms. Guns on campuses were first introduced during the 1979 student union elections at KU. By the early 1980s, they had arrived at PU as well.
Student union elections between student outfits affiliated to mainstream political parties were common until student unions and elections were banned by Gen Zia’s dictatorship in 1984. The ban revoked the 1974 Student Union Ordinance that had been authored by the Z.A. Bhutto/PPP regime. The Ordinance had regularised student union activity in all state-owned colleges and universities. It required campus administrations to hold annual student union polls on a single date.
These yearly elections were held in state-owned educational institutions across the country and were contested by student wings of various political parties. Election issues mostly included tuition fees, college/university transport systems and sporting, cultural and other extracurricular activities for the students. However, as my research demonstrated, student outfits were sometimes involved in rallying their supporters for various larger causes as well, such as the liberation of Palestine and Kashmir, the US involvement in Vietnam, socialism, Islam, etc. But the main issues during student union elections remained internal to daily student concerns.
The nature of violence which triggered the 1984 ban largely emerged from 1978 onwards — a year after Zia toppled Bhutto in a reactionary military coup. But it is interesting to note that despite going on a banning spree right after coming to power, the dictatorship did not immediately ban student unions. Till 1983, student union elections continued to take place according to the 1974 Ordinance.
There was a clear spike in incidents of violence between student groups at PU and KU from 1979. Then between 1981 and 1983, the violence intensified when students began to die from gunshot wounds. A 2009 documentary series Street Fighting Years (which ran on Dawn News and was produced by Mazhar Zaidi) showed former leaders of the progressive alliances accusing the IJT of introducing gun violence on campuses. There is enough evidence to suggest the same, but my research exhibited that by 1981 all student groups were armed.