Round The World
New Delhi, 23 April 2013
La Affaire Musharraf
POETIC
JUSTICE PAKISTANI STYLE
By Shreya
Upadhyay
Research
Scholar, School
of International Studies,
JNU
Former Pakistani military ruler Pervez Musharraf’s
homecoming sprang no surprises. True to the volatility and uncertainty which has
been the hallmark of Pakistani politics over the years Musharraf landed in a
bigger soup than he was facing while in exile. Expecting a hero's welcome, the
former self-styled CEO saw that none of the thousands who followed him on
social networking websites came to welcome him. Neither did his subsequent
arrest trigger any chagrin in a country which is witness to its first civilian Government
completing a full five-year term in office.
Pertinently, not only did Pakistan's Election
Commission deny Musharraf the opportunity to contest the general elections
scheduled next month but his dubious past caught up with him in the form of
judicial proceedings initiated against him, ironically by the same institution
he challenged while in power.
Now lodged in his lavish villa in Islamabad, as a State prisoner, Musharraf
must have understood the logic of poetic justice! The former Chief of Pakistani
Army was issued an arrest warrant by the Supreme Court, wherein the Chief Justice
was the most effective catalyst in him being thrown out of power.
Remember, Musharraf’s entry on the political stage
was no less dramatic when he seized control in a coup in 1999 and sent then-Prime
Minister Nawaz Sharif packing to Saudi Arabia. He ruled Pakistan as a self-styled Chief Executive --- a
post unheard of in Pakistan’s
power corridors --- and later as President in 2001.
He spent nearly a decade in power and tampered with
the Constitution. But, it was his decision to dismiss the Supreme Court’s Chief
Justice and several other judges that led to the beginning of massive civil
unrest against his rule which eventually brought him down.
Paradoxically, now that he is back from exile,
Musharraf might have to see the man whom he deposed as Pakistan Prime Minister
returning to power and presiding over his trial. Nawaz Sharif, according to
national and international polls, is all set to return to power in Pakistan which cannot
be good news for Musharraf.
It is again a quirk of fate for the retired General
that the man who picked him for the top Army post ahead of several senior Generals
and whom he ditched to take over the reins of power, is now the favourite to
win the elections that he wanted to become a part of.
Questionably, why did Musharraf return to Pakistan? That
too when the Taliban threatened to assassinate him and criminal charges awaited
him. As it stands, Pakistan
is facing a plethora of problems: Crumbling economy, political uncertainty,
corruption, food shortage, power cuts and Islamic fundamentalism.
Yet, with the Government completing its full five
year term it has kindled new hopes. Against this backdrop, support for
Musharraf had already started to wane in 2007. Thus, to accept that the
self-styled CEO’s homecoming was part of a grand political strategy does not
sit well. Pakistani media feel that Musharraf miscalculated the mood of
the country and his legal options before deciding to return home.
Interestingly, his applications for all four
constituencies were rejected by judicial officials overseeing part of the
election process. Later, the Court cancelled his bail and ordered
arrest. Reportedly, he has also been accused of treason for his
decision to suspend the Constitution and impose emergency which amounts to
terrorism. Thus, the case is now being heard before an anti-terrorism Court
which are closed to the media and public.
Notably, the other legal challenges facing him
include allegations that he failed to protect the life of former Prime Minister
Benazir Bhutto. He is also accused of ordering the killing of popular tribal
leader Nawab Akbar Bugti in volatile Baluchistan
in 2006. In his defence, Musharraf has maintained that these charges are
“trumped up, politicised cases”.
Nonetheless,
his arrest is a significant act in a country where senior Army officers have
long been calling the shots. The Army is still considered the most powerful
institution in Pakistan
retaining enormous behind-the-scene influences. It is also a fact that the
arrest is sure to irk some in the military who see the Armed Forces as the only
guarantor of Pakistan’s
stability. But it seems that the Army is deliberately unwilling to take up any
role in the recent turn of events.
According
to media reports, a month before his return a formal message was delivered to Musharraf
from the Army advising him not to return to Pakistan. But he ignored the
advice. Perhaps he misread the ground situation, assuming the institution he
once headed would shield him from the trial. In fact, while the Army has
provided him full security in his lavish villa which has been declared a
sub-jail, it has till date shied from interfering in judicial matters.
Notably
due to the fact that the judiciary is emboldened today. The Supreme Court has
increasingly taken strong positions, which some view as safeguard against the
un-Constitutional acts of the Government and political leaders. The court
ordered sacking of former Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani and took on Prime
Minister Raja Parvez Ashraf and other senior Government officials in corruption
cases. Thus, there is a hope that a strong and unbiased judiciary will serve as
a good check on political corruption and excess.
Consequently,
Musharraf, whose only calling card is the Army, has bleak hope in surviving in Pakistan’s new
politics. During his self-exile, differences emerged within the
former Army Chief’s All Pakistan Muslim League (APML). Today several supporters
have left the Party. Moreover, in the wake of his exit from the electoral
race, his political ambitions are almost over. It has been rumoured that
he returned to muddy the political waters ahead of elections in an attempt to
dampen the chances of Sharif's PML (N).
All
in all, Musharraf's return has added to the many pre-poll complications that
the country is facing, including Tahir-ul-Qadri’s popular activism January last.
Technically speaking, maybe the Government should be acting to enforce court
orders. But the main role of the caretaker set-up is to conduct elections.
Getting embroiled in matters such as the Musharraf Affair would hamper it. But
beyond that Musharraf’s presence or absence from Pakistani politics is unlikely
to have any serious impact on upcoming elections. --- INFA
(Copyright, India
News and Feature Alliance)
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