Mon 18 Aug 2008

Triumphalism over a Musharraf impeachment won’t hide the failings of Pakistan’s ruling coalition
Fatima Bhutto
The Guardian, F
Friday August 15 2008
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2008/aug/15/pakistan
The murky abyss of Pakistani politics has been especially murky over recent months, and true to form it just keeps getting murkier. The one thing that is absolute when dealing with the dregs that run my country is this: nothing is ever as it seems. Nowhere is that more true than in the current scenario involving President Musharraf’s likely impeachment by the ruling coalition.
“It has become imperative to move for impeachment,” barked Benazir Bhutto’s widower, Asif Zardari, at a press conference in Islamabad last week. Sitting beside the new head of the Pakistan People’s party was Nawaz Sharif, twice formerly prime minister of Pakistan. Zardari snarled every time Musharraf’s name came up, seething with political rage and righteousness, while Sharif did his best to keep up with the pace of things. He nodded sombrely and harrumphed every once in a while. The two men are acting for democracy, you see. And impeaching dictators is a good thing for democracies, you know.
But Nawaz Sharif and Asif Zardari are unelected. They’re not just unrepresentative in that they don’t hold seats in the parliament - they have absolutely no mandate in Pakistan. They head the two largest, and most corrupt, parties in the state but hold no public office. Pots and kettles.
The rest of the coterie that wields power behind this administration, the attorney general and the interior minister for instance, also happen to be unelected. They serve, and I use the term ever so lightly, by appointment only. Some 170 million Pakistanis have lived under military rule of law for nine years. Musharraf stepping down from his army post has not changed that. Neither did the recent selections. Sorry, I meant elections, obviously.
The current administration - a party coalition comprising two formerly mortal enemies, the PPP and the PML - has enjoyed five months in office. And what has this thriving democratic union accomplished? It passed the National Reconciliation Ordinance, an odious piece of legislation that wipes out 15 years’ worth of corruption cases against politicians, suspiciously covering 11 years of PPP and PML rule. Bankers and bureaucrats were also given the all-clear. Worse still, the ordinance contains a clause that makes it virtually impossible for future charges to be filed against sitting parliamentarians.
But they must have done more than that, surely? Well, all that really changed is that food inflation has accelerated, oil subsidies have been cut, gas prices have doubled, and those pesky militants in the Swat district the tribal regions have turned up the fighting. Several days before the decision to impeach Musharraf hurtled through the airwaves, a small story came in from the tribal areas: the militants are close, the story said, they’ve vowed to target the government, even to the point of attacking state schools. This is a civil war, the story said.
So what does the government do when its country appears to be tearing apart at the seams? Go on the attack. Impeach the tyrant. “The period of oppression is over for ever,” declared the prime minister, Yousuf Raza Gilani, at an event marking 61 years of Pakistani independence yesterday. “Dictatorship has become a story of the past.” Deny everything. Nothing is wrong, democracy is good and we hate dictators. Well done.
Pakistan is a sovereign country. We are a proud, resourceful, independent nation. We have options. Zardari is not an option. Sharif is not an option. The army is not our one and only option. The mullahs have not become an option yet. There are close to 200 million of us: I’m sure we can think of something better.
· Fatima Bhutto is a poet and a columnist for the News in Pakistan
August 19th, 2008 at 1:16 am
one trick pony
August 19th, 2008 at 3:21 am
Fatima Bhutto is also Murtaza Bhutto’s daughter and only 24 years old.
Sometimes, when I read her writing I wonder how in this age of dynastic politics, at least one person was able to channel her anger into a voice of morality and inspiration. People have called her idealistic, too much so for politics, which is perhaps a good thing. We need people like her to stay out of the system, yet be close enough to it to be able to point out what is wrong it.
But the issue is, she’s talking, who’s listening?
August 19th, 2008 at 4:48 pm
Farzana Versey on the same issue
http://www.counterpunch.org/versey02202008.html
August 19th, 2008 at 5:55 pm
A Pakistani friend of mine once told me that what Pakistan lost when they lost East Pakistan, was the support and influence on its social-political current, of a progressive, liberal intelligentsia thriving in the then eastern half of the nation.
The progressives in severed Pakistan could never regain their strength in the mainstream since then. Sadly, they have not done all that much better in Bangladesh either.
August 19th, 2008 at 7:31 pm
By kicking out Musharraf, Pak politicians have paved their way open for free, foul and fathomless corruption. No more Musharraf to look over their shoulders, for permission to steal, or sending them to jail.
Of all the people, Pak has been endowed with Nawaz and Zardari, the two doyens of Megabillion $ Swiss Bank corruption accounts, to UPHOLD DEMOCRACY - Masha’Allah!
It is not because of LACK of “liberal intelligentsia” that Pak and BD dont understand what is democracy, it is because they cannot shed themselves free from the primitive hangovers of Nawabism, feudal cultism and dynasty-lingerie.
August 19th, 2008 at 8:26 pm
On our front, many dreamers are coming down to the earth! Wise man of Daily Star and gong throwing up the ‘lessons of history’ now. They knew those lessons before they advocated, implemented, and tried to protect the contrary. The whole article is here
http://www.thedailystar.net/story.php?nid=51117
I hope KGazi will write a rebuttal soon.
August 20th, 2008 at 6:05 am
The lesser is said about democracy in Pakistan, the better it is, I believe, for many more years to come. How can you expect democracy in Pakistan when someone like Arundhati Roy, the celebrated Indian author and activist, trashes the Indian ‘democracy’ as ‘the biggest PR myth of all times’ for its bankruptcy even after some 60 years of ‘elected’ rule.
ahbabaziz@yahoo.com
August 21st, 2008 at 4:20 am
The dilemma with the country of Pakistan since its inception is that democracy has not flourished there in a real sense. Rather, it has not been allowed to. The country’s history is littered with intermittent patches of military rulers, who ironically, have fared better than the democratically chosen ones. Zardari and Nawaz Sharif are the biggest known swindlers in the country, who would perhaps now be taking hold of the helms of the country. When the political class is corrupt, then the bureaucracy too falls in line and the whole system gets rotten to the core. This is what has exactly happened in Pakistan. The arm-twisting tactics of military rulers vis-a-vis a corrupt democratic regimes is obviously the not the best solution, but the military has taken recourse to taking on the cudgels of power when things got haywire during the terms of democratically chosen leaders. The biggest threat presently to Pakistan comes from within with pro-Talibani elements gaining prominence. While it may be true that Pakistan may be having a surfeit of people who really can fare better than the present or the past lots of politicians, but the irony is that in the face of fundamentalists’ propaganda, people like Imran Khan do not get elected even though they may be far more forthright, honest, competent and very modern in their outlook. In Imran’s case, he is seen as pro-Jews as he was hitched to Jemima Goldsmith.
August 21st, 2008 at 6:42 pm
It seems that Bangladesh and a war-torn failed Afghanistan are the only countries in South Asia run by undemocratic, unelected, army and donor backed governments.
Congratulations to Pakistan for bringing blockhead fascist Musharraf to his knees. He should be tried and imprisoned for overthrowing an elected, constitutional government in 1999.
I am sure we too will win back our stolen democracy from the facists who have screwed up everything since 11th of January, 2007.