By Khalid Hasan
Daily Times (
One thing that must be recognised and saluted before all else is that the Abu Ghraib torture and humiliation of Iraqi prisoners was exposed by Seymour Hersh in the New Yorker and by an American network on the celebrated CBS news programme 60 Minutes II. It has been newspapers such as the New York Times and Washington Post which have given big billing to the story and which have thrown their letters columns open, the Times more than the others, for readers to express their outrage.
Had it been left to the Bush administration, the world may never have heard about Abu Ghraib. So this is what a free press is all about. This shattering episode took me back to the days of Gen Yahya Khan and the military crackdown against the people of
I was, at the time, a reporter on The Pakistan Times in
The late ZA Suleri, who prided himself on being a lieutenant of the Quaid and a keeper of
The only Pakistani journalist who was able to write about the atrocities in East
The apology that we owe to Abdulla Malik`s `mazloom awam` has not been made. What Gen. Musharraf once said about letting bygones be bygones is not enough. While The Pakistan Times was controlled by the government-appointed National Press Trust, there was nothing to stop the non-Trust papers from bringing the truth about
Governments are always slow to own up when bad things happen. The Bush administration had been aware of the Abu Ghraib incidents since at least February when the army completed its inquiry. Even Congress was not informed and it is up in arms because of that. However, had it not been for the American press, the story might not have seen the light of day. The outrage felt by many here I found best reflected in what Philip Kennicott of Washington Post wrote. He said among the `corrosive lies` a nation at war tells itself is that the `glory` belongs to the country but the failures are those of a few individuals. The administration, he pointed out, has called Abu Ghraib an aberration. But the regret in official
These photos show us what we may become as occupation continues, anger and resentment grows and costs spiral. These pictures are pictures of colonial behaviour, the demeaning of occupied people, the insult to local tradition, the humiliation of the vanquished."
It is not too late for a Pakistani to write like this about what we did in
(Khalid Hasan is Daily Times` US-based correspondent. Contact: khasan2@cox.net )