Samira Shackle in Aeon:
We are sitting in a room the size of a football pitch in an upmarket area of Karachi: men and women in our mid-20s, most smoking cigarettes. On a coffee table in front of us sits a two-litre bottle of imported Famous Grouse whisky and an equally outsize bottle of Absolut vodka. Occasionally, a servant — a young man the same age as us — enters to remove dirty glasses or refill the ice bucket. Outside is a fleet of cars, and three armed guards; two working at the gate of the house, and one who accompanied a guest. The group is debating the merits of the iPad mini. Sadia bought hers on a recent trip to New York. Faroukh interjects: ‘You’re so lucky you have a US passport. I’m dying to go. I’ve been waiting for my visa for eight weeks now.’ Talk turns to the torturous process of travelling with a Pakistani passport. One young woman says with outrage that her parents recently had a visa application rejected by the US embassy: ‘I mean, what the hell are they going to do? Blow up the White House?’
In the eyes of the world, Pakistan equals terrorism. For young, privileged Pakistanis wishing to travel to the UK, the US or France, that means submitting to a visa application process that can take months to allow for extra security checks. ‘I feel self-conscious, even apologetic when I’m travelling internationally,’ said Komail Aijazuddin, a 28-year-old artist from Lahore. ‘I’m not always made to, but myself I feel it.’ Ghazal Raza, a 26-year-old NGO worker from Peshawar, in north-western Pakistan, describes being pulled out of a queue in Bangkok airport. ‘They said: “You’re a Pakistani passport-holder. We have to do a full security check.” When you travel, you know what people think of you and your country.’
Like many others, Ghazal blames overly negative media portrayals of Pakistan. But the hindrance of the Pakistani passport also underscores deeper questions about national identity. When I first met Komail, at his house in Lahore, he showed me the clause printed on every page of his passport: ‘Valid for every country of the world except Israel.’ ‘In order to get my passport to leave the country, I have to say that Israelis don’t exist, and that Ahmadis [a persecuted Muslim sect] don’t exist, and that I believe in the Prophet and the last word of God,’ he told me. ‘Fine. But what do the Israelis have to do with it?’
Just because you are rich, westernized, have an iPad and want to travel abroad does not mean you are not a terrorist or mean anything. The poor illiterate servant, the guards who serve them or the 99.9% of the population are not terrorists either. Quite contrarily, the writer is saying that if you are not like them, then yes you may be.
What a fine way to improve Pakistan's image!
Posted by: Raza Husain | Saturday, September 14, 2013 at 11:34 PM
I have been curious for some time about US policy toward those applying for Visa's from Pakistan. I have not been able to find any official statement. The granting and not granting of Visas appears to be completely arbitrary. Its not even clear who makes these decisions.
Pakistan is a country with significant anti-American feeling. A country that has supports those who kill Americans in Afghanistan. And and country that harbored Osama bin-Laden.
I cannot imagine why the United States would allow any Pakistani outside of the transit area of JFK. There should be no visas granted to citizens of Pakistan. Why should the United States take the risk of allowing a Pakistani across its borders?
Posted by: No Man | Saturday, September 14, 2013 at 11:36 PM
No Man, you'r living in a fools world !
Posted by: nr | Sunday, September 15, 2013 at 12:52 AM