Musharraf has the Last but
One Laugh
By B. Raman
President General Pervez Musharraf of Pakistan has had
the last but one laugh. The voting for his re-election as
the President, while continuing to hold additional charge as
the Chief of the Army Staff (COAS), by the outgoing National
Assembly was completed on October 6, 2007, and the Election
Commission has unofficially indicated that he has "swept"
the engineered poll, with his two opponents getting only
three votes between them. Presuming that the two must have
voted for each other, the only interesting question is who
was the third person who voted against Musharraf.
2. Only wishful-thinking Pakistani analysts and
ill-informed Indian analysts were looking for excitement
from the election. Right from the day the Supreme Court
refrained from intervening to prevent the illegal
deportation of Nawaz Sharif, former Prime Minister and a
sworn enemy of Musharraf, to Saudi Arabia, and from the way
the proceedings of the court while hearing arguments on the
petitions challenging Musharraf's right to seek re-election
were going on, it must have been clear to any objective
analyst that the Court, while continuing to question the
arbitrariness of individual acts of Musharraf as the
President, is reluctant to question the legitimacy of his
holding office and seeking re-election as the President of
Pakistan.
3. The results of the Presidential election have not yet
been officially declared because the court has ordered that
no official declaration should be made till it pronounced
its final judgement on the constitutionality of the special
law, which permitted Musharraf to hold two offices as the
President and the COAS. The arguments on the substantive
issues are expected to resume before the court from October
17, 2007, after the Ramzan fasting period is over. The court
rejected requests from the petitioners to order the
postponement of the elections till it pronounced its
judgement on the substantive issues. This is another
indicator that the court does not want to open a legal
Pandora's Box by questioning the legitimacy of Musharraf
holding office as the President and the COAS.
4. The lawyers and many media personnel continue to be in
the forefront of the anti-Musharraf campaign. The public
itself is showing signs of fatigue after seeing the way the
principal political leaders---particularly Mrs. Benazir
Bhutto--- have conducted themselves as if what matters is
their personal interests and not the national interests. The
problem in the Pakistani political landscape is that the
people do not have much of a choice. Neither Gen. Musharraf
nor Mr. Nawaz Sharif nor Mr. Shujat Hussain nor Mrs. Bhutto
excites them. They are stale leaders with self-interests,
but no political vision. The choice before the people is not
between a devil and a saint, but among four devils. One
should not be surprised if they conclude that it hardly
matters who is in power.
5. The rotten state of politics in Pakistan would be
evident from the fact that for the last one month or so
these four leaders have been so preoccupied playing their
political games that they have not even noticed that the
situation in the tribal areas in the Pashtun belt has been
going from bad to worse due to the activities of a welter
of jihadi terrorist groups, including Al Qaeda, the Islamic
Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU), the Islamic Jihad Group, which
is another Uzbek organisationn allied to Al Qaeda, the
followers of Baitullah Mehsud of South Waziristan and
Maulana FM radio Fazlullah in Swat, the various local
Taliban groups and individual citizen jihadis called
Jundullahs or Soldiers of Allah.
6. There has been no sense of shock in the political
circles that the followers of Baitullah Mehsud have captured
nearly 300 members of the Pakistani para-military forces
such as the Frontier Constabulary and have been holding them
hostage for over a month, demanding the release of some
followers of Baitullah, who are in Government custody. The
followers of Baitullah have already beheaded three of the
captured personnel and are threatening to behead three every
day till their demands are conceded. There has been no sense
of outrage in the political class---either in the ruling
circles or in the opposition--- over what has been
happening. No demand that the Government should do something
to free the captured security forces personnel. The fact
that all the captured personnel are themselves tribals from
the Pashtun belt partly explains the indifference in the
rest of the country---particularly in the Army's GHQ--- to
their fate. If, instead of capturing these tribals of the
para-military units--- Baitullah's followers had captured
some Punjabi soldiers of the Army, the reactions in the rest
of the country might have been different.
7. Musharraf has not had the time to visit the affected
areas and reassure the personnel of the para-military forces
that he would do everything in his power to rescue those
captured and crush the jihadis. He is issuing all his
statements from Islamabad. Neither Mrs. Benazir nor Mr.
Nawaz Sharif nor Mr. Shaukat Aziz, the Prime Minister, nor
Mr. Shujjat Hussain has had the time to preoccupy themselves
with the fate of the captured personnel and to meet their
relatives. In the meanwhile, the Lal Masjid of Islamabad,
which has been re-opened on the orders of the Supreme Court,
is back in the jihadi business.
8. If this state of affairs continues, what might
ultimately prevail are not the judgements of the judiciary,
but the fatwas of these jihadis, who are issuing fatwas calling
for attacks against somebody or the other. The latest fatwa
of Baitullah Mehsud is against Mrs. Benazir Bhutto.
10. If this continues, there is a real danger that the
last laugh in the on-going Greek tragedy in Pakistan will be
not of Musharraf, but of Osama bin Laden or his Pakistani
surrogates.
(The writer is Additional Secretary (retd),
Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, New Delhi, and,
presently, Director, Institute For Topical Studies,
Chennai. E-mail:
seventyone2@gmail.com)