The Battle Lines Are Drawn
21 Jan 2012
By Saeed Qureshi
So the battle lines are visibly drawn on Pakistan's
volatile political battlefield. The Prime Minister
Gilani and the president of Pakistan and the
co-chairperson of the majority party Pakistan People's
Party Asif Ali Zardari have, of late, come out with a
studied posture of defiance against the Pakistan
Army's top brass and the supreme court of Pakistan
headed by the inimitable chief Justice Iftikhar
Mohammad Chaudhry.
The Supreme Court has been coming down with a
justifiably heavy hand on the questionable doings and
wrong policies of the government with decisions that
would be treated as land mark in the judicial history
of not only Pakistan but that of the world. The NRO,
the Swiss bank cases, the so called Memogate are some
of those gubernatorial cases that have defiantly
braced the sitting government against the superior
judiciary.
The most bizarre and frightening dimension is the
trading of recriminations between the army and the
ruling leadership. The latest ISPR's press release is
loaded with a veiled warning and gives inkling as to
how the army is readying itself to move if there could
be a possibility of a takeover, though for holding
premature elections. The Diaspora of political parties
that are aligned with the government or opposed to it,
are coming out with diverse statements either in favor
of the government or else in support of the army and
judiciary.
Tehrik-e-Insaf chief Imran Khan has resoundingly
declared to stand by the Supreme Court. The PMNL
seized by the paranoia of military takeover is, still
reticent as what could be the best posture in the heat
of this confrontation, Jamaat-e- Islami Chief Munawwar
Hasan has virulently lashed out at the government and
true to their past records would support the army.
While the PMNL would not want a military takeover, it
would prefer to bank upon a constitutional strategy in
order to bring about a parliamentary coup that could
dislodge the government and force it to resign and
announce new elections. The government is waiting for
the senate elections to take place so that it could
muster and generate enough strength to be able to
withstand and foil a probable impeachment movement
against the president of Pakistan if the imbroglio
proceeds that long.
If the government can announce snap elections, the
dark clouds that are hovering over its fate might be
scattered for the time being. But still the NRO
verdict would have to be complied with by any interim
or the present government, whatever the case might be.
Equally would be the urgency and inevitability of
fulfilling the judicial order for withdrawing the
letter about the withdrawal of the Swiss cases and
writing another one asking the Swiss courts to reopen
the money scam cases of Asif Zardari.
The Memogate case that popped up from nowhere and has
assumed as astounding dimensions will have to be
driven to its logical conclusion. When the case would
further proceed in judicial hearing and crystallize
following the evidence of the main character Mansoor
Ijaz, the court might be able to determine what could
be the truth. In that case Hussain Haqqani and
president Zardari would face dire consequences.
The major players in Pakistan's spectrum: the army,
the government and judiciary are now openly adopting
confrontational and mutual despising postures to bring
home the sordid fact that democratic set up has been
thoroughly shaken and thrown overboard for which the
government is primarily responsible due to ducking and
dithering on judicial verdicts. The political parties
and the parliamentarians have yet to come into the
main tussle as to what roles they would play in the
final countdown.
But the government has been in trouble and its
credibility had remained at stake when president
Zardari reneged on the commitments and the common
goals outlined and agreed upon in various memorandums
of understanding, one of which was ‘Charter of
Democracy' jointly signed by Benazir Bhutto and Nawaz
Sharif on May 14, 2006 in London. The other was the so
called Murree Declaration inked by Nawaz Sharif and
Asif Ali Zardari in March 2008 for coalition
government and restoration of judiciary.
Had the stipulations of the charters been allowed to
be translated into meaningful and concrete follow up
actions, the coalition of both the leading political
parties would have been at the helm and consolidating
the democratic edifice.But Mr. Zardari in a stunning
demonstration of defiance and volte face broke those
well defined goals and wriggled out by pleading that
such papers or the accords were neither binding nor
sacred like scriptures.
Thereafter, the PPP has been soliciting support from
the fringe parties notably the ANP and the MQM to
remain in power. The JUI walked out of the cobweb but
in its place the PML (Q) was taken on board. The
joining of the PML (Q) was patently an abject
scratching of each other's back.
The PPP wanted an ally to keep its parliamentary
majority intact while the Chaudhry clan desperately
needed their scion Moonis Ilahi to be let off the hook
of a stupendous money making scam. Interestingly both
parties previously, were the bitterest foes demeaning
each other by using the vilest expletives.
So what one sows reaps the same. What goes around
comes around are idioms that are hackneyed but
robustly portray the sleazy demeanors of the political
leaders that denude themselves in matters of serving
their petty interests. They override the supreme
national interests and sacrifice, the dignity,
principles and morality they are expected to hold
fast.
By antagonizing the leading institutions and also
tormenting the civil society as well as the people of
Pakistan through unsurpassed and bad governance, the
government seems to be groping into a dark tunnel and
has lost its rudder of legitimacy and as friends and
genuine servants of the people. As far their bid to
get a label of political martyrdom; that could have
been possible if the government's record were clean
and its performance above board, commendable and a
model of good and honest governance.
I am afraid in case of the government going down,
whether by its own volition or elbowed out by the army
or via a countrywide street agitation, the ministers
and its top leaders will have to face a storm of legal
cases to be instituted by the people and civil society
members or by suo moto actions of the courts.
Already The Don Quixote of PPP and tongue lashing
lancer Babar Awan is in deep trouble for his
unwarranted attempt of ridiculing the Supreme Court.
The Supreme Court cannot stomach the disgrace hurled
at it by a minion of the government who not long ago
was the law minister of the predictably tottering
incumbent government.
©
EsinIslam.Com
Add Comments