
By Imad Zafar
December 20, 2018
The accountability court in Pakistan has
reserved the verdict against the ex-premier Nawaz Sharif in the two references
and it will be announced on December 24. While Sharif awaits his fate, the
noose around Asif Ali Zardari, former president and Pakistan Peoples’ Party
(PPP) co-chairman, is also being tightened – he and his aides have been accused
of money laundering and corruption by the joint investigation team.
The year 2018 saw many ups and downs in the
political discourse of Pakistan. The cricket star turned politician Imran Khan
was sworn in as the 23rd prime minister of Pakistan in August. However, his
electoral victory was tainted by allegations of pre-poll rigging and the mass
manipulation of political proceedings by the establishment that backed him.
Why democracy is getting weaker
Wajahat Masood, a senior journalist and
intellectual, told this correspondent, “This year was terrible; we saw
victimization of political opponents in the name of accountability and the
manipulation and engineering of the electoral process, which resulted in the
demise of the already fragile and weak democratic system.”
He also was of the opinion that the establishment
asserted more control and that Pakistan has reverted to the era of General
Pervez Musharaf. Wajaht does not hold Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI)
responsible for the demise of democracy and blamed the forces who control the
proceedings from behind the curtains. Wajahat maintains that Pakistani society
was polarized on March 12, 1949, when the Objectives Resoultuion was passed,
and it will remain polarized until we pave the way for the will of people to
prevail over the will of selected institutions.
This correspondent asked Wajahat to explain
the political polarization and intolerance in Pakistani society. He said, “As
far as the intolerance is concerned, both society and the state are intolerant.
We have seen that on many occasions. The state does not tolerate dissent. Look
at the Pashtun Tahafuz Movement ( PTM) … they are termed traitors. What is
their fault? Are their demands not constitutional? The PTM’s demand to bring
encounter specialist Rao Anwar to justice is unjust? The military-mullah nexus, which is 60 years
old, has spoiled the political and social fabric of the society.”
Asked whether he was optimistic about the
future of our country, Wajahat replied, “ I am not optimistic about the
immediate future because the current paradigm is not capable of delivering on
the economic front. Every institution has to draw the line about their role as
per the constitution and sanity must prevail that the national interest can
only be defined by the votes of the masses, not by the authority or the institutions.”
Senator Mushaidullah Khan, a close aide of
Sharif and a senior leader of the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz, however, said
he was optimistic about the future of the country’s democracy, despite his
party being targeted and marginalized for not taking orders from the invisible
forces. He said, “For me, the hope is that the masses are gradually becoming
aware of the fact that the political proceedings are controlled and engineered
by the invisible forces.
“There are members of civil society and
journalists who are raising their voices and presenting the other side of the
story by resisting the prevailing narrative. This means a lot and had Asif
Zardari not toppled our provincial government in January at the behest of
invisible forces, the outcomes of the Senate and general elections could have
been entirely different despite the pre- and post-poll rigging.”
However, he is critical of the role of
media. “I never expected the major part of media to accept the curbs imposed
recently and I expected them to show resilience,” he said. “Probably the owners
of media groups are more interested in profit-making. Though there are a number
of journalists who still are raising their voices and losing their jobs, the
larger part of media still remains hostage to the curbs.”
In a question regarding whether he sees any
patch-up between his party and the establishment, he replied, “Nawaz Sharif
never fought with the establishment, he only refused to take dictation and he
had the courage to say no to the invisible forces in the process of
decision-making. Every single ‘No’ of Sharif tilted the balance of power in
favor of democratic forces and, as per the constitution, he was the chief
executive of the country, so he did not initiate any rift or fight and he will
stick to his principles of not taking dictation from anyone.”
He knows that the path his party has chosen
is very difficult. He said, “Look, we know we have to pay the price for the
path we have chosen, but this is the only way forward for Pakistan and
democracy. The way Nawaz Sharif stood and remained firm in his stance against
the invisible forces is unprecedented and in spite of being victimized, he is
standing against all the odds. We know that you have to give greater sacrifice
for the greater cause.”
Hussain Haqqani, Pakistan’s former
ambassador to the US, does not seem optimistic about the current political
discourse. He told this correspondent, “The elections that brought PTI into
power were tainted by pre-poll manipulation. The current government is behaving
in an authoritarian manner. It seems we have gone back to the era of the 90s
where corruption cases were used against rivals to help the political party in
power and the establishment. The divisiveness off that era appears to be
returning with a vengeance and is unlikely to benefit the country.”
The senior journalist and analyst Adnan
Rehmat thinks that both the PML-N and the PPP are equally responsible for the
weakening of democracy. Rehmat said, “Both the PML-N and PPP failed to help
each other in strengthening the democracy and, ironically, they strengthened
PTI and the security establishment. In the end, the judiciary and establishment
became overtly politicized and politics became more militarized.”
Keeping in view the opinions of these
journalists, intellectuals, and politicians, one thing is certain and that is
that the current political paradigm is tailored to suit the establishment in
order to serve its own interests. Democracy has been mocked and the large chunk
of the population has, through the establishment and mullah nexus, been made to
believe that democracy and political leaders are corrupt and responsible for
every ill and problem of the country.
For the world, it has been a century of
advancement in the social and political domains where nations are learning the
fact that the less the state intervenes in the manipulation of the political
discourse the more it is beneficial for the economic and democratic progress of
the country. However, Pakistan is not yet ready to get out of the self-created
paradox that only serves the purposes of the establishment and keeps the masses
in a state of delusion by feeding them self-created glories and hatred towards
adopting the modern concepts of state and democracy with the help of propaganda
propagated through a large section of the media, textbooks and the religious
wing.
Source:
atimes.com/pakistans-dilemma-of-democracy-and-political-dispensation/?utm
URL: http://www.newageislam.com/the-war-within-islam/imad-zafar/pakistan-has-reverted-to-the-era-of-general-pervez-musharraf/d/117218