Versuchen GOLD - Frei

Lives on the Line

Kashmir Observer

|

FEBRUARY 11, 2026 ISSUE

Decades after anti-Pakistan slogans first erupted in Kashmir following a cleric’s assassination, renewed violence against Shias in Pakistan has reignited protests and highlighted state silence.

- Syed Eesar Mehdi

Lives on the Line

Pakistan was imagined as a homeland for Muslims of South Asia, a place where they could feel secure and have a political voice after years of colonial rule.

But from early on, the country struggled with a basic question about belonging.

Almost 80 years later, that question still hangs over the country, akin to what an erstwhile top general once called the “unfinished business” of Partition.

Who counts as a Muslim? Whose interpretation holds weight? And whose lives are considered worth protecting?

‘These debates continue to shape the state.

It is within this unresolved space that the situation of Shias in Pakistan must be understood.

‘Their persecution follows a clear pattern. It grows out of deep structures and rigid ideas, and it continues because the state repeatedly chooses silence and inaction.

To grasp this reality, James C. Scott’s book Seeing Like a State offers a powerful theoretical entry point.

Scott argues that modern states simplify complex social worlds in order to govern them, elevating those groups that fit neatly into official vi sions of order while marginalizing those that complicate it.

Populations that do not serve the state’s dominant ideological or political project are rendered expendable, treated as noise, surplus, or, in Scott’s words, “weeds”.

Shias of “Mamlakat-e-Khuda-dad” increasingly inhabit this expendable category.

They exist within the state’s borders but outside its moral importance.

Before Scott's framework becomes fully legible, however, Pakistan's political logic must be situated within broader philosophical debates on power, exclusion, and violence.

Hannah Arendt’s contemplations on the banality of evil help explain how extraordinary violence becomes routinized when institutions normalize indifference.

WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON Kashmir Observer

Kashmir Observer

Tulip Garden Likely to Open by March 15: Officials

The Indira Gandhi Memorial Tulip Garden, located in the foothills of Zabarwan, is likely to be opened around March 15, subject to favourable weather conditions, officials said.

time to read

1 min

FEBRUARY 17, 2026 ISSUE

Kashmir Observer

LG Orders Reopening Of 14 Tourist Spots

Lieutenant Governor Manoj Sinha on Monday ordered the reopening of several tourist destinations across Jammu and Kashmir following a detailed security review.

time to read

1 min

FEBRUARY 17, 2026 ISSUE

Kashmir Observer

Kashmir Observer

Marsh, Head Fire Before Sri Lanka Bowl Out Australia for 181

Skipper Mitchell Marsh and Travis Head blazed away to explosive fifties before Sri Lanka rallied to bowl out Australia for 181 in their T20 World Cup match here on Monday.

time to read

2 mins

FEBRUARY 17, 2026 ISSUE

Kashmir Observer

Markets Rebound Nearly 1% On Buying In Power, Banking Stocks

Equity benchmark indices Sensex and Nifty rebounded sharply by nearly 1 per cent on Monday, driven by strong buying in power, banking, and financial stocks amid a mixed trend overseas.

time to read

1 mins

FEBRUARY 17, 2026 ISSUE

Kashmir Observer

SKUAST-K Holds Academia-Industry Dialogue To Boost Inclusive Growth

In a significant stride toward fortifying the regional economy against both global and local headwinds, Sher-e-Kashmir University of Agricultural Sciences and Technology, Kashmir hosted a landmark Academia-Industry Trade Dialogue during its 11th annual Technology-cum-Trade Fair, Gon’gul 2026.

time to read

1 min

FEBRUARY 17, 2026 ISSUE

Kashmir Observer

Kashmir Observer

Wellness Without Age: Yoga for Senior Citizens at Budgam

BUDGAM:

time to read

1 min

FEBRUARY 17, 2026 ISSUE

Kashmir Observer

CBSE Tells Class 10-12 Students Ignore Exam Leak Rumours

The CBSE has \"strongly\" urged students and all concerned stakeholders not to get misled by rumours about question paper leaks in the Class 10 and 12 CBSE Board exams beginning on Tuesday.

time to read

1 mins

FEBRUARY 17, 2026 ISSUE

Kashmir Observer

Kashmir Observer

Wholesale Price Inflation Rises To 1.81% In Jan

Wholesale price inflation extended upward momentum for the third straight month, at 1.81 per cent in January, driven by an uptick in prices of food, nonfood articles, and manufactured items on a month-on-month basis, government data showed on Monday.

time to read

1 min

FEBRUARY 17, 2026 ISSUE

Kashmir Observer

Forfeiture of 25 Books HC Gives Centre More Time To File Reply

The High Court of J&K and Ladakh has granted till time to the Centre to submit its reply in a batch of petitions assailing the forfeiture of 25 books dealing with Kashmir's political and social history.

time to read

1 min

FEBRUARY 17, 2026 ISSUE

Kashmir Observer

Kashmir Observer

Silver Slumps 2% As Gold Gains ₹700 Per 10 Grams

Silver prices declined by 2 per cent to Rs 2.5 lakh per kilogram, while gold increased by Rs 700 per 10 grams in the national capital on Monday.

time to read

1 mins

FEBRUARY 17, 2026 ISSUE

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size