MORAL FOR INDIA : CORRUPTION NEVER PAYS
http://www.freepressjournal. in/news/71058-pak-hurtling- towards-poll.html
President Zardari seems to be the main obstacle in the way of smooth executive- judiciary ties. He is certainly part of the problem, and not the solution
FRANKLY SPEAKING SEEMA MUSTAFA
http://www.freepressjournal.
Pak hurtling towards poll
FRANKLY SPEAKING SEEMA MUSTAFA
FRANKLY SPEAKING SEEMA MUSTAFA
- India
- Jun 25, 2012
President Zardari seems to be the main obstacle in the way of smooth executive- judiciary ties. He is certainly part of the problem, and not the solution
The people of Pakistan are helplessly watching their government and the
judiciary slug it out in a drama that would have been farcical had it
not been so dangerous. On the one day Pakistans Supreme Court
disqualified Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani. The Pakistan Peoples
Party went into a huddle and emerged, after some debate, with Textiles
Minister Makhdoom Shahabuddin as its choice for Prime Minister. Almost
immediately a lower court issued an arrest warrant for him over a drugs
scandal. A day later the PPP named Raja Pervaiz Ashraf as the
replacement for the Prime Ministers post. It remains to be seen whether
he survives as in an earlier stint as the power and water minister
Ashraf had been dogged with allegations of corruption, and is certainly
not seen as a particularly honest man in his country.
His future,
thus is uncertain with even the Pakistan media questioning Ashrafs
stability in office. The loud talk after the Supreme Court has subsided
as a rather chastened PPP is now clearly worried.
After the
initial ruling Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari, in a rather defiant
mood, had declared that the era of " packing Parliament through the back
door" is over and " no back doors or side doors will be allowed to be
reopened for sending the elected Parliamentarians home." However, he had
to eat his words and sent Makhdoom home, and perhaps even to jail if
the courts have their way.
The Supreme Court is clear that it
wants Pakistans Prime Minister who so it might be, to write to the Swiss
authorities for details of President Zardaris accounts.
And it
will not doubt raise the issue again as soon as a Prime Minister is in
place. So any Prime Minister of the PPP will again have only one of two
options: to either defy the courts directives, and be disqualified. Or
to crack down on the judiciary, arrest all independent judges, and
establish the power of the executive and the legislature over the
judiciary through the use of brutal force.
Short of this the
cases against President Zardari stand, and the Supreme Court clearly in
no mood to reconcile with the government, will continue pursuing the
cases of corruption against him. The chaos over the disqualification is
thus not temporary, and the clouds are not going to pass. The government
led by a President widely acknowledged to be corrupt, from the taxi
driver to legislators in Pakistan, is not in a position to resist a firm
judiciary without the seams cracking open. PPP legislators dubbing the
court verdict as a " conspiracy" to prevent the Zardari government from
completing its five years in office till February 2013 are actually
admitting the writing on the wall: early elections are around the
corner.
Zardaris brave talk is not convincing.
And while
the worry in battle- torn Pakistan is real about the outcome of this
clash between the executive, legislature and the judiciary there is not
much left in the system to check it. The only way out of the mess, and
that too not as a certain option, are early polls. Imran Khan has
already called for elections. The others, more crafty in their politics,
are seeking new alignments. Former Prime Minister and head of PML( N)
Nawaz Sharif has become active in trying to make friends of old enemies,
including some who he had sworn never to speak to as long as he lived.
Zardari has already spoken to MQM chief Altaf Hussain and made a bid to
persuade JUI- F chief Maulana Fazlur Rehman to come back into the PPP-
led coalition. Rehman has reportedly refused.
The point is that
Pakistan seems to be hurtling towards an election with breakneck speed.
There is a growing feeling within that country that these might provide a
fresh start by bringing a new, and perhaps less corrupt and more
responsive, government in power. It is clear that the Pakistan Army
under General Pervez Kayani is not going to seek power, preferring to
let the so- called institutions of a fragile democracy battle it out in
the field. Imran Khan has perhaps the least to lose and the most to
gain, as from a tally of zero he hopes to rise to the position of at
least a ''''king- maker" if not the king himself. It is true though that
his popularity has grown tremendously, and the young people seem to now
look upon him as their preferred option. To what extent this translates
into votes has to be seen and Pakistanis in any drawing room in
Islamabad for instance remain divided between a " he will sweep"
position to a " he will definitely get a few seats." His relations with
the military seem to be good, and he is not likely to face any real
opposition from this all important constituency in Pakistan.
PML-
N chief Nawaz Sharif seems to be coming out of his slumber to make a
bid to power. He has waited for long, and is now said to have approached
several political parties including individuals in PML- Q if Pakistan
media reports are to be believed. The former Prime Minister is believed
to be in touch with MQM and ANP as well as smaller groups in the
National Assembly like JUI- F and PPPSherpao.
No one has rushed out in his favour but the process, as politicians like to say, is on.
The manipulative skills of Zardari that Pakistanis recognise as "
highly successful" in keeping him and the PPP in power have alienated
many in government, and even his party. Even at this moment while the
men around him are paying the price, Zardari himself has managed to stay
out of the legal loop, at least until a Prime Minister writes to the
Swiss, and the Swiss agree to provide the necessary information to the
Pakistan courts.
Seems very much like the Bofors or Black Money
trail that Indian governments have pursued over decades with little to
no results! Democracy in Pakistan has been taking knocks, over and over
again. The desire of the people has been countered several times by the
Army through direct rule; and now by this unseemly row between the
pillars of democracy over a President who has refused to step down and
allow the law to take its course. It is interesting to note that there
is little to no questioning in the Pakistan media about Zardari and what
he should do to restore the rule of law and with it levels of democracy
in Pakistan. Instead, even leading luminaries have got involved in the
judiciary versus executive debate, with the latter now threatening to
take the matter to the legislature as it has in the recent past.
Articles about the role of the judiciary etc have appeared in the media,
but while it is important to have a debate as we have here in India
over the role of the judiciary or judicial activism as many call it, it
is also important to understand the reasons for the row, and what can be
done for smoother functioning of these important institutions.
President Zardari seems to be the main obstacle in the way of smooth
executive-judiciary relations. He is certainly part of the problem, and
not the solution that will emerge on its own if he removes himself from
the seat of power. But then this is highly unlikely, and being possessed
of manipulative skills he is still moving the pawns in a bid to
outmanipulate the judiciary in this game of nerves and power.
FRANKLY SPEAKING SEEMA MUSTAFA
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