ISLAMABAD - Arabstoday
Pakistan is confronted by multiple challenges of extremism, terrorism, insurgency and issues of governance. It also faces acute economic problems and mounting energy and water shortages, whilst recovering from last year’s devastating floods. At the same time it is a nuclear-armed state, the ‘front line’ for the war in Afghanistan, and a country whose future is vital for global security and stability. Dr Maleeha Lodhi is the editor of a new book entitled ‘Pakistan: Beyond the Crisis State’. It looks beyond what are often caricatures of Pakistan and investigates the diversity and resilience of its society. How do Pakistanis see themselves and their country\'s fault lines and address ways to overcome them? To what extent do Pakistan’s people have the capacity to transform their country into a stable modern Muslim state? Can a ‘middle class-led coalition’ effectively reform governance? Dr Maleeha Lodhi is a distinguished diplomat, journalist and academic. She served twice as Pakistan’s Ambassador to the US (1993-96, 1999-2002) and as High Commissioner to the UK (2003 – 2008). She has been the editor of two of Pakistan’s leading national dailies, The News and The Muslim. She taught at the London School of Economics from where she also obtained her Ph.D. More recently, she was a Fellow at Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government and a Public Policy Scholar at the Woodrow Wilson Centre. She is a recipient of the Hilal-e-Imtiaz for Public Service, the second highest civilian award of the Pakistan government. This meeting will be chaired by Rahul Roy-Chaudhury, Senior Fellow for South Asia. It will be held in the Lee Kuan Yew Conference Room at Arundel House