OPINION 10 Page 4 Tuesday, February 16, 1982- The Michigan Daily A different perspective on Pakistan Pakistan. What most Americans know about this country in southern Asia you could balance on the hump of a baby camel, our chief sources of information being either The New York Times or 30-second squibs on the network news. But that's okay-we like our international news in pre-chewed, easy-to- digest niblets. F Howard Witt economic aid to this dictator Zia (really bad). THAT'S IT. That's everything the media tells us about Pakistan-which is all we really want to know, anyway. Just enough infor- mation to allow us to make yet another snap judgment about a complex world issue. But just as the cut-and-dried revolution in El Salvador grows a bit murkier when you ac- tually talk with a Salvadoran, just as the sim- ple conflict in Northern Ireland gets a lot more confusing when you hear from a resident of Belfast, so too does Pakistan become more enigmatic when you listen to a Pakistani. In the interest of disturbing a few preconceived notions about both Pakistan and the Third World in general, I introduce Man- zer Durrani. Durrani, 37, is several years into a PhD program in pharmacy at the University. He first came to the United States from Pakistan in 1964, has been a resident for the last ten years, and just became an American citizen three months ago. I MET HIM last week at a forum on the proposed federal cutbacks in college financial aid-he was introduced to me as a man who would be hurt by them. Which was an under- statement. Durrani has been trying to support a wife and three small children on $450 a month, $300 of which must go for rent. He works 40 hour-, a week in two research jobs just to pay his tuition and has been using a $2000 National Direct Student Loan to pay for food. President Reagan wants to gut the NDSL program next year. "To take money from education," Durrani says, "to take $2000 from me as a student and put it into a 155-millimeter shell-my brain is less than a bloody 155-millimeter shell? $2000 helps me survive for a whole year!" He refuses to take food stamps or welfare; he doesn't want something-for nothing. All he wants is a fair chance to complete his education. BUT THIS IS, however, another story. As Durrani says, "I will starve and survive. I will survive. Let Mr. Reagan take my loans, I will survive. I want to get educated." I want you to hear from, Manzer Durrani, the eloquent and insightful Pakistani native. "Nobody has bothered to learn about me, what I am, what my religion is. Every time you see the TV or the news or anything we are the Islamic fanatics. Muslims, Christians, and Jews have been living together for cen- turies-you can have fanatics on any side. For God's sake, don't condemn one billion people to a label. ". ..A country like mine has tried to get democracy for the last 30 years. Although the people themselves are very much democratically inclined, the international situation around us is such that whenever there is some thread of freedom, of democracy, somebody pulls the rug from un- der us and causes so much chaos that there is a danger of the country falling apart. "LOOK WHAT happens. Democracy means freedom and freedom of speech. It means that you hear the worst things and the best things at the same time. But because the political structure is so weak, the subversive elements of the right or the left-the people who want to undermine the government-are just waiting for some freedom of the press to bring the whole country down.- "The people are so afraid to lose the coun- try as an entity that they want a very strong, maybe even a dictatorial, government just to survive as a nation. "So we walk a very tight rope. We keep a strong government, a very strong political leader or a military leader ruling us just for the sake of our own survival. President Zia is not hated, but neither is he loved. He is a necessity. "Where there is abject poverty, disease, malnutrition, and unhygienic conditions, to remove those you have to have a strong leader. People become democratic as soon as they have their stomachs filled and as soon as they have clean clothes. "LOOK AT CHINA-there are one billion people there. But they are fed people. You don't hear of starving in China. And they have clean clothes. And slowly you see com- munism sort of easing up, there is some sem- blance of peoples' voices being heard. "You see, you emerged as a democracy, because 200 years ago, your forefathers had the imagination, the brilliance, to leave you this wonderful heritage of a democratic system after suffering under a monarchy. "Our nations of the Third World were just born 30 years ago. Our history has yet to go a hundred years for us to evolve strong in- stitutions. So don't ask too much from us too fast. You must let us understand ourselves, what we want to be." Durrani has a lot more to say-about American perceptions of his native country, about why many Third World countries hate the United States, about prejudice and selfishness and hatred. I hope you'll pick up this page tomorrow to read it. Part Two of this interview appears tomorrow. Witt's column normally ap- pears on Tuesdays. a0 A Its warm-water ports are threatened by the Soviets in neighboring Afghanistan (that's bad) so Pakistan is aligned with the United States (that's good). It's governed by an authoritarian military dictator, General Mohammad Zia ul-Haq (bad) who is accused of human rights violations (bad), refuses to sign the Nuclear non-Proliferation Agreement (bad), and may be developing nuclear weapons (bad). Finally, President Reagan wants to increase military and 4 - ---, Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Vol. XCII, No. 113 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Reporting on human rights Weasel By Robert Lence WILL THIS BE YOUR FIRST TIME IN FLORIPA, FREP? Q frO, .A' I YEP. AND IM REALLY LOOKING FORWARD TO LT. IM 51GK OF WINTERI S COULD KC-ALL( i USE A BREAK! I l YA KNOW WEASEL, I LOOK UPON OUR LITTLE 3'OURNF( HERE AS A sOKT OF CRUSADE. A5 A GRAND AND NC6LE GESTURE ON OUR BART To UPHOLD THE TRADMONS OF OUR. PREDEc e-SoPS. W14Y, STUDENTS 4AVE BEEN MI&RATtN6 Tz> FweivA Fop- ,5PRiNG BREAK F'o!Z C EN RATI octS! THERES EVEN EVtDEN-F- 77iAT THE IMPIANS - f 4 ?t}ATS 1NTERESTINb. YOU 669 tT As A CROSAve, uti ? I SEE- IT MoR6 LIKE WAMING5, ttv TMGlp. ANNUAL ARSH Tb 7 E SEA. '_, e- ,- 76 0 7 J --s AE NMI( glf-Y - HE REAGAN administration, with its first evaluation of international 'human .rights conditions, had a alpable opportunity to take a firm stand against all human rights violations. Instead, the ad- ministration's report to Congress last week offered the disappointing message that U.S. human rights judgments tend to fall heavier on our foes than our friends. Officials professed that last week's report, covering 158 countries, was an evenhanded examination. On certain accounts, the report fulfilled this promise-while communist-bloc coun- tries predictably were condemned for their human rights violations; coun- tries closely linked to the United States, such as Taiwan and South Africa, were chastised'for their poor performance. The report, however, failed to carry out its admirable intentions toward several Central and South American countries. The Reagan administration,, eager to renew ties to Chile and Argen- tina, neglected to delve into these regimes' notoriously repressive ac- tivities. Both Chile and Argentina con- sistently have been cited in previous reports for imprisoning political op- ponents. And while condemning Cen- tral America as a whole for its declining performance, the report tread lightly on El Salvador, praising its attempts to institute humanitarian reforms. The report thus reneged on its proclaimed readiness to. offend old friends in pointing out violations. The Reagan administration is further tur- ning a blind eye toward these violations with its human rights testimony to Congress-testimony necessary for increasing foreign aid. As an example, the president has already certified that free political conditions in El Salvador are im- proving. Officials even hint that similar certifications for Chile and Argentina are forthcoming. Such actions by the Reagan ad- ministration show a willingness to use human rights as just another political tool. The report's message to foreign leaders is clear-it is easier to receive a clean slate on human rights when one is a longstanding friend of the United States. The administration's premature certifications also make clear that foreign aid currently relies on passing political, not humanitarian, tests. It is ironic that the report's introduc- tion proudly states that the United States has now "taken the lead in op- posing . . . the double standards ap- plied to human rights violations." Through its biased evaluations, the Reagan administration may only help create a human rights double standard all its very own. et ting the students involved in 'smaller but better-- a0 Redirection. Vice President for Academic Affairs Billy Frye's unveiling of the five-year plan for the reallocation of funds within the University holds serious consequences for the entire University community. This is the first time in the University's history that a plan of this magnitude to restructure has been in- troduced. All academic units are being scrutinized-$20 million must be reallocated. This means extensive cuts or even elimination of some units to improve and bolster others. The decisions made today will result in a radically different educational community in the future. It is crucial that dif- ferent perspectives are involved in deter- mining how this shall be accomplished. Full student participation is therefore essential. Frye's plan calls for two types of cuts in academic units (centers, institutes, schools and colleges) to reach this $20 million goal. The first type involves cutting selected academic units by ten percent or completely eliminating them. A preliminary list will be determined by a small committee: three Budget Priority Committee members, Frye, and his staff. This list will then be made public and full reviews established to deter- mine the feasibility of these cuts. The second type of cut will be the variable across-the- board cuts of less than 10 percent within a given unit. These reductions will be decided internally by each unit with guidance from Frye. THE FIVE-YEAR redirection plan is a precedent for policy making at the Univer- sity. It also creates precedent on another matter-direct student representation in decision-making. For the first time, students will be directly involved in every stage of the decision-making process. Through a series of discussions with Frye, student leaders gained substantive roles for students in each step of the process. The most By Jonathan Feiger, Jamie Moe/er, and Margaret Ta/rmers important aspect of this participation is placement of a student member on the initial committee that draws up the list of major cuts. This marks the first time that students have been directly involved in the initial stage of the decision-making process. In the past, students have been involved only indirectly and in insignificant ways, such as public hearings. The second direct role for students will be on each review committee. Any unit which will be cut more than 10 percent will be reviewed by a sub-committee of BPC. Each of these will include students. This is in sharp contrast to the geography elimination case where students were systematically excluded from the review committee. Students now will be actually participating in academic reviews. These roles are much more than symbolic-they provide students, for the first time, with the ability to influence the future of the University and their own education. There must be full participation from the University community in all aspects of the redirection policy. The areas identified as priorities for new funding must be discussed and debated in public forums. Such discussion should be augmented by independent com- mittees charged with determining the nature of each reallocation. THE PRESENT situation is far from ideal. Students have gained a role in the initial for- mation of plans and on review committees. Now, student participation in the equally im- portant internal academic decision-making and reviews within each unit must be insured. Our participation is in no way an approval of the University's redirection plan. We are concerned about the future of the University under "smaller and better." Our first concern lies in the shift to "vocational" education. The five-year plan will place increased emphasis on the schools of engineering and business administration, which will necessarily result in relative starvation for the social sciences and the humanities. As this trend continues under the five-year plan, our position as a diverse, yet excellent, university will be sacrificed. Our second concern lies in the area of minority students and staff. Current goals call for 10 percent minority hiring and enrollment, yet the latest statistics indicate that the University is far from meeting even this meager goal. The University must make this a high priority in its redirection plan. Third, we are concerned with studentg enrollment. As most of us know, many classes are presently overcrowded. As faculty positions are cut within a unit, and no corresponding -reductions in enrollment follow, overcrowding will become even more widespread. Obviously the quality of education at the University will diminish. We question the entire "smaller butbetter" redirection program, yet believe it essential that students take a substantive role in the process. Only in this way can students effec- tively influence thefuture of the University. Such participation does not signify endor- sement of the administration's policy. Our participation within the structure cannot preclude our participation outside the struc- ture. We must continue to provide alternative solutions and priorities in order to influence the future of our University. f b '; C "T Free Iousi Feiger, members Moeller, of the and Talmers are all University's student government. Wasserman nor Of -uls W T ALL IAW~CE \5 NOT S'?L\T ONEF& ?NESIMT RAG&ANAND I NAVE ~WORKED OUT A JOINT PLAN OF ACGTON- ~THE U5. WILL NOT IMPoRT NATURAL GAS ROM THE SOVIETS... MDN Wj'E WON'T SELL C EA ANY & AtN ; i iMd