Politics Returns to Pakistan: Where From Here?

Posted on August 3, 2007
Filed Under >Adil Najam, ATP Poll, Politics
67 Comments
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Adil Najam

The good news is that politics – in the good sense of the term – is back in Pakistan. The bad news is that it is not clear where it is going.

Today we heard the news of the Supreme Court asserting its independence again by ordering the release of Javed Hashmi. I also want to share the results of our most recent ATP Poll – on the ‘new BB-Musharraf deal.’ I put it in inverted commas because there is much more speculation about this than fact.

ATP Poll on Benazir Bhutto - Pervez Musharraf Deal

But, before that, the news of the day. Which is that the Supreme Court has passed an order directing the concerned authorities to immediate issue the order for release of the incarcerated Muslim League-N Acting President, Javed Hashmi.

According to BBC News:

Pakistan’s Supreme Court has granted bail to opposition leader Javed Hashmi, who was jailed for inciting mutiny in the army, forgery and defamation. The former acting president of a Pakistan Muslim League faction was sentenced to 23 years in jail in 2004. Mr Hashmi was effectively serving at most seven years in jail as he was handed seven different prison terms running concurrently.

He was arrested in 2003 over a letter critical of President Pervez Musharraf. Mr Hashmi’s appeal against his sentence is yet to be taken up for hearing by the high court in Lahore. But the country’s Supreme Court, headed by Chief Justice Iftikar Chaudhry, acting on a separate review petition, granted Mr Hashmi bail saying that he had already served his sentence. “If periodic remissions are counted, he has already served his entire sentence,” Chief Justice Chaudhry said, while granting bail to Mr Hashmi. “Even if remissions are not allowed to him, he has nearly served the sentence, counting the length of his imprisonment before and during the trial,” he added.

… Javed Hashmi was arrested after circulating a letter bearing a military letterhead which was purportedly written by disgruntled officers. It called for an inquiry into alleged corruption in the army’s senior ranks and demanded a judicial investigation into a Pakistani military operation in Indian-administered Kashmir in 1999. The authorities claimed the letter, which was also highly critical of Gen Musharraf and his alliance with the United States, was a forgery. Mr Hashmi’s allies said they believed the letter was genuine and that the charges of forgery were politically motivated. He was convicted at a trial behind closed doors in the city of Rawalpindi, near Islamabad. Mr Hashmi’s trial was widely criticised as “politically motivated” by observers and opposition groups. The US and other foreign governments had expressed concerns over lack of transparency in the trial.

Is this a sign – one hopes – of a revitalized and energized Supreme Court after its reinstatement of the Chief Justice? We certainly hope so. Or is this a sign that the Musharraf government is reaching out not only to the PPP but also to the PML-N? That will also be a good thing. Or is the meaning of this something very different altogether?

Whatever its meaning, this, I think, is one more data point in the growing trend of ‘politics’ – in the good sense – having returned to Pakistan. The results of our most recent ATP Poll seems to suggest that same. But it also shows that there are more questions in Pakistan politics today, than answers.

Our recent Poll was a repeat of an earlier poll we had conducted back in April when rumors of such a deal had first surfaced. We asked the same question and gave the same options as before. That is: “What would a Benazir-Musharraf Deal Mean for Pakistan?” Of course, much had happened between April and July – including the Lawyers movement and the Lal Masjid operation – so we wanted to see how opinion of ATP readers had changed. Here is what we found:

First, the majority opinion remains that the deal will make things WORSE in Pakistan. Importantly, the percentage of people thinking so has increased – from 43 percent of the polled in April to 59 percent now.

Second, the percentage of people thinking that it will make things BETTER has also increased – from 16 percent to 21 percent. But this opinion remains a clear minority.

Finally, the paradox above is explained by the fact that the number of people who think it will make NO DIFFERENCE have gone down dramatically – from 41 percent to 18 percent. From the numbers it seems that the people who think it will make a difference has gone up drastically but most of them think it will make things only worse.

Like any web-based poll, this is only indicative of the type of people who visit our page and is NOT a scientific poll by any stretch. Some 654 people had voted in the April Poll and 1023 people voted in our July Poll. (I suspect, however, that the real number in teh second poll might have been less since some people were able to vote more than once because we moved computer servers during this period and because the poll was hosted outside ATP; however, I believe the results would have still been the same and were stable at these percentages nearly from the start).

The deal is seen to be more important now partly because it is seen to be more real. The real interesting question now is what explains this change and what does it mean. What do you think about this?

To me, this only reconfirms something that I had written in an article for The Friday Times last week on the All-Parties Conference (APC):

The good news is that politics – in the good sense of the word – is back in Pakistan. There is a palpable sense that people are tired of military rule. But what we are seeing is much more than boredom with authoritarianism. There is a clear realization that political problems need political solutions. That politics may not always be the most efficient way of doing things, but it is the most legitimate. That institutions do mater. That the great issues of state and policy cannot be resolved through simple managerialism. That nations need leaders, not Chief Executive Officers (CEOs).

The bad news is that the one group that seems even more unprepared for this sea change in public sentiment than Gen. Musharraf and the ruling PML-Q, are the opposition political parties. The recently concluded All Parties Conference (APC) demonstrated exactly how. On display in London was the same petty bickering, hollow sloganeering, lust for personal power, and the disconnect from the real problems of Pakistanis today that has so often turned so many Pakistanis away from these same political parties. It could be argued that the APC was the only good news that Gen. Musharraf has had in a very long time. It reminded Pakistanis of the poverty of political alternatives to military rule.

This is a great shame. The people of Pakistan seem quite ready – even eager – for a return to politics — and to meaningful democracy. If the APC is any indicator then it is not at all clear whether our politicians are.

… You have to stand up and say what you stand for. These are momentous times and the people of Pakistan want to be have a say in the nation’s future. This is not simply a question of who the next leader should be; it is a question of what the various leaders stand for. At the end of the day it does not matter if all the opposition parties are united. Why should they be? After all, they are competitors. But it does matter that the people of Pakistan know what the various political parties stand for and who they stand with. The APC failed for many reasons, at least one of them was that it was very evident who the parties stand against, but it was not at all clear what they stood for.

67 responses to “Politics Returns to Pakistan: Where From Here?”

  1. WASIM ARIF / OTHER PAKISTAN says:

    Ali Raza Bhai,

    Why so much despondency? we are the lucky ones for we have seen since 9/3 a sea change in Pakistan right in front of our eyes. We have seen the rise of a new Pakistan movement which inshallah will deliver. It wont be easy, and it will mean we have to undertake yet more trials and tribulations but we can succeed if we all work together. See this link and scroll to New Pakistan Movement to see why we can smile again- http://www.otherpakistan.org/archive

    I agree with your views on most Pakistanis being on the middle ground, we have a fixation from some quarters on pigeon holing people as extremists, anti-state, nationalists, moderates and so on . The whole debate is a waste of time and I will prove it via an example.

    I passionately disagree with Baluchi nationalists (others too) so Sen Sanaullah Baloch should be on my hitlist. However I believe he speaks many truths about the injustices against the Baluchi people so I want to talk to him, to bring him on board and in my opinion once we succeed then you will come to find much of the anger in his and other nationalists belly will come to subside. My aim is to create that alternative Pakistan, an ‘other’ Pakistan that we can all be proud of, see http://www.otherpakistan.org for more details and even better tell me what you will like to see in that alternative Pakistan.

    Keep the chin up bhai!

    Feimanallah

    Wasim

  2. ali raza says:

    this is my first time at this forum, i hate to be cynical but my guess is that most individuals posting on this forum reside abroad & are from the upper middle class(if there is any?), the disconnect is very visible from the ground reality inside PAKISTAN, Pakistani society is neither religious nor secular,as i stated in my previous post it is in fact a concocted country where each ethnic group swears allegiance to it’s respective ethnicity, & to make matters worse their is an overlapping sectarian strife. i see no hope i do not know what makes any one think otherwise???

  3. ali raza says:

    iam not sure if i agree with the notion of “right wing” & “reactionary” when it comes to pakistani politics, most pakistani parties are ethnocentric in nature and there is no single “PAKISTANI” national identity to talk of, hence no right wing ideology aside from the political MULLAHS who inflame religious feelings(one way to unite the majority) in the general masses when ordered to by their “MASTERS”, iam not even sure what ideology does PPP(P) aheres to, i guess it is the ideology based on political opportunism just to hold the power no matter what, Pakistan is a concocted country which is heading to an end like YUGOSLAVIA.

  4. WASIM ARIF / OTHER PAKISTAN says:

    Kruman Bhai,

    I agree this Berlin wall is soon to fall, the dying military regime last rites are now in full view of our luckless awaam. I wonder what you will make of my proposal as follows:

    My dream scenario would be for the lawyers movement to take centre stage again and announce for this election only either support for the PTI including party tickets for greats like Ali Ahmed Kurd, Aizaz Ahsan and the like so that PTI wins nationally and then for Imran Khan to announce in the interests of Pakistan he will lead a government of national unity of all the talents so we can deal with our national issues collectively. Imagine a government lead by Khan saab and the leading lawyers and one that includes Asma Jehangir, Farzana Barri, Rasul Bux Paleejo, Cowasjee, Javed Jabbar, Fakhruddin G Ebrahim, Aitzaz Ahsan, Anwar Baig, Afsandyar Wali, Mehmood Khan Achackzai, Khurshid Mehmood Kasuri, Ch Nisar Ali, Sanaullah Baloch, Adil Bhai, Ayaz Amir, Rahimullah Yusufzai, Fatima Bhutto, Hafiz Hussain Ahmed, Dr Javed Ghamidi, Prof Mehdi Hasan, Dr Javed Iqbal Moinudeen Haider, Talat Masood and even our favourite Gen Hamid Gul (Maybe Wasi too!) as the country needs national healing. We need to bring people together of all sides especially the so called nationalists and not create division amongst ourselves.

    See how you and all ATP readers can play your part in creating a better Pakistan at http://www.otherpakistan.org

  5. Kruman says:

    “he provides no real answers to issues like taking on terrorism and militancy, which most of us agree are pressing issues that won

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