quoted as saying, “I want to be clear: the US Embassy is here to support you and stand by your side every step of the way”. The news of the event immediately provided the much needed cannon fodder to the starving right-wing forces in Pakistan who took to the streets and rallied support to forcefully reject anything modern, western, American, secular and rational in the same stride. But the most interesting bit was yet to come from the office of the secretary of the state, Hillary Clinton. It concludes that the secretary herself and her department is committed to rights for all without any discrimination and would continue to support such initiatives across the world. I invite Hillary Clinton to hold a similar event in Saudi Arabia, her closest ally, and issue a press release thereafter.
This is not to say that LGBT are not discriminated against in Pakistan or their rights should not be realised. Even the otherwise conservative superior court has ruled out clearly in support of the trans-gendered, the most marginalised and exploited in the country, both socially and economically. Besides, Pakistani gays have to undergo incomparable social and psychological stress in making personal decisions and leading a normal life. But if Americans at the highest diplomatic level start championing their rights, the struggle would be adversely affected. The representatives of the right wing, who are also not immune from the vices projected on others, will get a renewed ideological strength in the hypocritical political order of Pakistan. Americans need to sort out the issue of convergence of interests with their allies in the war on terror first.
The writer is an Islamabad-based poet, author and public policy advisor. Email: harris.khalique@ gmail.com
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