A Pakistani actress who posed in the nude for an Indian
magazine with the initials of Pakistan's feared and powerful intelligence agency
on her arm has triggered fury across this conservative nation.
Veena Malik's photo on the website of FHM India, in
advance of its publication in the magazine's December issue, has been lighting
up social network website Facebook and Twitter since earlier this week.
Many here anticipate a backlash, as nationalists and
Islamists regularly stage rallies against anything they deem an insult to Islam
or to the national honor. India and Pakistan have fought three wars, and the
Inter-Services Intelligence agency or ISI has been accused of sponsoring
terrorist attacks inside India.
Malik has broken Pakistani religious and national taboos
in the past. She is a target for conservative ire and a heroine to some
Pakistani liberals.
Conservative cleric Maulana Abdul Qawi declared on Aaj TV
on Saturday that her latest venture into controversy was a “shame for all
Muslims.” Farzana Naz, interviewed by the same channel on the streets of Lahore,
said that the actress had “bowed all us women in shame.”
Twitter commentator Umair Javed however called on
Pakistanis to “make copies of the picture and bury it in your backyard. This
way, our grandkids will know there were some amongst us who lived free!”
Asked by reporters whether Pakistan would “pursue the
matter” legally, the country's Interior Minister Rehman Malik said Saturday,
“First, let us see whether it is real or fake.”
Malik for her part says that the photo at the root of the
current uproar was published in violation of her agreement with FHM India. In an
interview with Pakistani Geo television broadcast Saturday, Malik acknowledged
having been photographed for a “bold but not nude shot.” She said the editor of
the magazine had promised that he would cover most of the photo with the ISI
initials.
Malik said that the photo was intended to poke fun at the
Indian fear of Pakistani spies: “Whatever happens (in India), people say ISI is
behind that.”
Malik said she would “probably” take a legal action
against the magazine for violating terms and condition.
Magazine editor Kabeer Sharma said Malik did all with her
full consent.
“We have all the record(s),” he told the Pakistani
television station. “Veena was very excited about that ISI idea.”
Malik does most of her work in India. The entertainment
sector there is booming, while Pakistan's is moribund. Her ties to Pakistan's
archrival have landed her in controversy in the past.
During a much-publicized talk show appearance early this
year, she lashed out her nemesis Abdul Qawi, who criticized her for having a
scripted love affair with an Indian actor on an Indian reality show.
“What is your problem with me?” an angry Malik demanded
of the scholar, who had accused her of insulting Islam.
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