|
Yasser Latif Hamdani (born 1980) is a Pakistani lawyer and writer. Education Hamdani received his early education from Bloomfield Hall School Lahore, PAF College Sargodha and the International School of Choueifat Lahore. He holds a BA in Economics from Rutgers University New Jersey, where he served on the board of the Pakistan Students Association, and a law degree from the Quaid-e-Azam Law College of the Punjab University. He is also the regional head of the Rutgers Alumni Club Pakistan. Political and peace activist As a student at Rutgers University, he was actively involved in the US Democratic Party and worked to elect Jon Corzine. As a student at Rutgers, Hamdani first brought national attention to the growing influence of Salafi and Wahabi Islamists in Muslim organizations on American campuses. During the Pakistan Chief Justice constitutional crisis, he came out heavily in the favour of the Chief Justice in his interview on the BBC . He was a representative of the Lawyers' Movement during 2007 . In a radio interview on BBC, he declined to join the call for mass uprising as called forth by Benazir Bhutto in the aftermath of the emergency imposition, "unless it had any chances of moving towards success". He has also commented extensively on US politics and in an article declared that Barack Obama would be better for Pakistan. Back in Pakistan, Hamdani has supported the cause of Pakistani religious minorities. He prepared a manifesto titled "what do religious minorities want" which was circulated and was in part adopted by the All Pakistan Minorities Alliance after Hamdani appeared on anchor Meher Bukhari's show "Nai Rahain" on Sama TV. Hamdani has promoted peace initiative with India which he considers essential to the fulfillment of "the basic objectives of the Pakistan movement". His articles have been published in publications like Dawn Newspaper, Daily Times Pakistan, The News and Daily Star and is a regular contributor to Chowk.com, PakTeahouse.wordpress.com, Pakistaniat.com and NaseebVibes.com. Scholar He is credited with the Federation of Communities principle which seeks to introduce a third house with community representatives in a new secular and democratic dispensation he favors for Pakistan. In this he seeks to build a national identity on "multi-layered identity framework" that existed before British colonization of India. Hamdani promotes the point of view that Pakistan was envisaged by Mahomed Ali Jinnah as a secular state. . He has promoted the H M Seervai and Ayesha Jalal school of thought on partition of India which holds that Jinnah was ready to come to an arrangement on the basis of United India, but was left with no option by the Congress party to opt for a separate and sovereign Pakistan.
|
|
|