After All Zardari Is the President Of
Pakistan
04 Jan 2012
By Saeed Qureshi
If the detractors of Asif Ali Zardari do not respect
him as a person let them at least venerate the office
he is holding. Simultaneously he is the chairman of
the leading political party in Pakistan whose services
to the country have not been excelled by any other
party. The parties like individuals face phases of
rise and fall and fame and decline.
The PPP is passing through the same cycle but
hopefully, would come out of this dismal situation
with a new vigor and commitment and fall back on its
original track of devotion to the cause of the
downtrodden.
The political brinkmanship and bickering takes odious
forms in a country like Pakistan where the race for
power assumes monstrous proportions through vilifying
and character assassination of the rivals. Now in
democracies, there should be a modicum of mutual
tolerance and respect even if a dispensation stumbles
in coming up to the expectations of the people.
PPP has been mauled for almost three decades by the
overbearing establishment. As such it could not
deliver and implement its revolutionary program for
the benefit of the common people. It speaks for the
resilience and inherent strength of this party that
every time; it braved the vicious and ferocious storms
with exceptional poise and resilience.
If there were other parties in the same horrendous
situations and had been bludgeoned for a prolonged
period of time, these would have vanished from the
political scene of Pakistan or would have turned into
fringe and insignificant political outfits. But after
every malady and crisis, the PPP has resurged with
added vigor, renewed spirit and vibrant determination.
Its two illustrious and lofty leaders, who still rule
the hearts and minds of the majority in Pakistan, were
assassinated. Zulfikar Ali Bhutto had fallen victim to
a malicious and partisan judicial process and Benazir
Bhutto was murdered by the dark forces that would not
want her to lead the country with a watershed agenda
for change.
To allege that her spouse the incumbent head of state
was somehow involved is her assassination is outright
false and negates the commonsense. At a time when
Benazir Bhutto was killed in Rawalpindi, even the best
of sorcerer or pundit could not predict if the PPP
would win the elections in case a democratic process
was to be set in motion by the military establishment
under general Musharraf.
At that time, the political situation was in a melting
pot and was brewing up to be crystallized in due
course. Benazir Bhutto was intelligent enough to
foresee that she was vulnerable and could be removed
by the vengeful opponents and therefore had to
nominate a successor in her will. The full text of
that document could be revealed on the order of the
court if someone makes such a request. Benazir Bhutto
did not want the PPP to fall apart in case she was
removed from the political scene of Pakistan.
But the will and nomination of a successor is besides
the issue that we are analyzing in this article. If
the PPP rank and file has accepted Mr. Zardari as the
president of the party then it is entirely the party's
internal matter. If the PPP can manage to elect the
chairman through a proper voting procedure then the
nomination lacuna would also be washed off.
In due course of time the allegations of corruption
against Mr. Zardari would be taken up by the court
which in fact has made considerable progress after the
detailed verdict of the apex court on the NRO. Now if
the government moves ahead by withdrawing the previous
letter of closing the Swiss cases, there could be
further revelation whether Mr. Zardari have done
something wrong and he deposited money in the Swiss
banks or not. It would be prudent for antagonists to
wait for the outcome of the legal process.
As for cutting short the tenure of the government, it
would be better to wait for the next elections and let
the people decide through the ballot which party they
would like to rule the country. That is the only
legitimate recourse to determine the right or wrong
performance of a government.
Thus far somehow despite heavy and countless odds, to
keep intact the edifice of the democracy despite poor
governance, alone is a laudable achievement of the
present government. The political acumen of president
Zardari in forging new political alignments must be
appreciated and applauded as he has proven that he was
always ahead in browbeating the other contenders in
the political arena..
The political game in Pakistan has never been played
on leveled grounds. It has remained subject to rough
and tough conditions and personal and clannish
animosities. As such the political process moves
forward though with jerks and jolts. To keep the PPP
in power by weaving and working out alignments and
coalitions with such unpredictable and recalcitrant
parties as ANP and MQM is not a mean achievement. At
least with such arrangements the cart of democracy is
moving forward.
The bad governance and corruption is endemic and
seeped into the very body politic of Pakistan. If we
claim it's only the PPP whose ministers and leadership
is corrupt then it would be a partisan and unrealistic
denouement. All sections of society, all branches of
governments, all institutions, and the top brass of
the country sitting in influential and high profile
slots have been corrupt all along. Are there not
stories of corruption and misuse of power about
parliamentarians, the senators, the bureaucrats the
army generals and so on?
In Pakistan the politics has been mostly overwhelmed
by jingoism. There are invariably hard sentiments and
fixed stances between the people in power and those
out of it. The tussle boils down to one baneful
motive: to pull down a sitting government by hook or
crook even it means undermining the democratic culture
and imposing the military dictatorship.
No government has ever been popular and fully
supported by the people in Pakistan. General Ziaul-Haq
was despised for obvious reasons. Nawaz Sharif
remained under the burden of disparagement for his
dictatorial disposition and for falling out with
judiciary and army. The PPP that came to power by the
masses support was bitterly opposed by the political
adversaries as well as the army and the bureaucracy.
So to single out PPP for all the misdeeds under the
sun would be too biased an opinion for the
vendetta-filled political counterparts who would want
a military rule over the country but not a political
dispensation that despite its drawbacks should still
be preferable and far better for the country.
Presently, the Press and judiciary enjoy absolute
freedom in Pakistan. The civil society is active and
on the move. The elections are drawing near and the
political forces are gearing up for that. The people
enjoy the freedom to vent their enraged feelings and
outrage in rallies and demonstrations without any
hostile or stern retaliation from the government.
These are the fruits of democracy and shining aspects
that we all enjoy because of an elected government
that despite many shortcomings allows civil liberties,
dissent and debate.
We should not be impatient to invite undemocratic
forces to push this government down the hill. In
another year or two, through fresh elections a new
government, with the will and vote of the people, will
step in. That would be for the first time that a
civilian democratic government would complete the
constitutional tenure of five years.
Would that not be the brightest and most spectacular
achievement that the present government would be
entitled to? The demand for snap elections may satisfy
the urge and expediency of the opposition to snatch
power but would deprive the duly elected government of
its constitutional right to rule for the stipulated
period.
©
EsinIslam.Com
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