This article has been published in Pakistan Today https://www.pakistantoday.com.pk/2017/11/04/are-varsities-breeding-grounds-for-militancy/
Universities are a breeding ground for terrorists; therefore, we
need to take serious actions to resolve this issue. This is the argument that
is being bombarded by the state institutions towards the academia.
Let’s analyse the first part of the argument: Is it really so?
Examples of IBA alumnus Saad Aziz and the recent phenomena of Abdul Karim
Sarosh Siddiqui—a central commander of Ansar-ul-Sharia Pakistan (ASP) and a
dangerous militant described as the mastermind of the attack on Izharul
Hassan—are cited to justify this point. However, looking at this point deeply
shows that both of these people had left the university well before they
started their terrorist activities.
If the varsities are to be blamed for the actions they did well
after leaving their institutions, then why not also talk about their schools,
colleges, locality, mosques and everything else around them? Why point out just
one level of education? And out of more than 30,000 students at Karachi University
(KU), if you have one example, would you consider it to be a systemic problem
at the university level? Or is it just a natural outcome of how the society at
large is responding to state policies, not just at the campus level but also at
a local level.
This seems to be a case of grasping at straws on part of varsity
administrations, as no matter how invalid the argument may be, it facilitates
pressurising campus students and varsity bodies to curb any form of dissent
against the policies of the state.
Secondly, if universities are somehow facilitating
radicalisation, then we must go through the university curriculum and carefully
analyse it. After all, the curriculum plays an important role in an
individual’s learning process. But when we observe that a person who was
studying applied physics or business administration is getting radicalised
towards militancy, something feels amiss. Is there even a correlation between
militancy and such advanced subjects?
Thirdly, if the case is presented in such a manner that a
non-university-going person, who was a non-militant individual, became a
radicalised individual after joining a university, then this argument can and
should be investigated. But, before we delve any deeper into it, we need to
question the state once again: When you ban student unions and create various
hurdles and roadblocks in the way of an open environment for political discussions
at campuses, what else do you expect?
How will the students—some of them deeply frustrated—vent the
anger that exists against state policies and religious bigotry? If they are not
allowed to discuss and debate such issues, sorting them out in an educated,
political manner, then—like it or not—the environment of militancy would
naturally flourish. This is true not just for a university, but the society in
general.
The state routinely abducts people, and they go ‘missing’ on
matters of political differences and ideas, without giving them the right to
present themselves in a court. When these individuals return, their jobs are
gone; their family is devastated; they have gone through psychological trauma;
their friends are deeply affected. Such an environment of fear will only give
rise to a hidden form of militancy, which can be easily exploited by incorrect
Islamic interpretations. This is generally true for the whole society, and,
when it comes to campuses, it is evident there as well.
Fourthly, the examples of militants cited were not actively
engaged in developing a militant network in their respective universities, as
we have one ex-IBA student and one former KU graduate who connects with others
and engages in a terrorist activity. They were not creating a network of
militants in IBA or KU which would have meant that an environment of militancy
was being created at campuses. Had they been engaged in any such venture, they
would have been easily singled out and targeted beforehand by the
administration. But that was not the case.
The first part of the argument does not hold any weight on which
the next part is being suggested by the Counter-Terrorism Department (CTD): The
CTD wants data from the universities and they want character certificates of
the students and teachers from police stations before admission.
If for the sake of discussion, we agree that the universities
are indeed a breeding ground for terrorists, then the suggestions presented by
CTD seem to be very irrational. There are over 3 million students enrolled in
grades 13 through 16 in Pakistan’s 1,086 degree colleges and 161 universities,
according to Pakistan Higher Education Commission report for 2013-14. Is this a
rational approach to put 3 million students under surveillance just on the
basis of some lone wolf terrorists, who were not even trying to expand
militancy within the campuses? What message will you be sending to the students
in general? As Senator Raza Rabbani correctly pointed out: it would create fear
amongst the students, which is a very negative impression for them.
On the contrary, if a person had a militant or radical mindset
before joining a university, there is a fair chance that he may change his
mindset after getting a decent exposure of social sciences and technology. His
vision is more than likely to be broadened in understanding society after
coming across different perspectives and ideas.
Opening up student unions and allowing political and religious
discussions in an educated manner can flush away lingering thoughts of
militancy within a society.
What needs to be done is to grasp the real reasons behind
militancy and radicalism that has engulfed our society in general. Not
recognising a string of wrong foreign policy decisions by the state since the
1980s will only exacerbate the situation. A coherent counter-narrative to
extremism is yet to be developed, whereas the state is still relying on force
and coercion to resolve this issue.
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