Manipulated Elections: Karr lo jo karna hai

Posted on September 21, 2007
Filed Under >Adil Najam, Law & Justice, Politics
120 Comments
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Adil Najam

UPDATE (Sept 28, 2007): In a split decision (6-3), the Supreme Court of Pakistan has ruled that Gen. Musharraf can contest the Presidential Elections in uniform. Earlier, on September 20, Justice Javed Iqbal had remarked that the 17th Constitutional Amendment provided crutches to President Musharraf, not by the Supreme Court.

According to The News:

The nine-member larger Bench hearing the identical constitutional petitions comprised of Justice Rana Bhagwan Das, Justice Javed Iqbal, Justice Abdul Hameed Dogar, Justice Sardar Muhammad Raza Khan, Justice Muhammad Nawaz Abbasi, Justice Faqir Muhammad Khokar, Justice Falak Sher, Justice Mian Shakirullah Jan and Justice M Javed Buttar…. Six of the nine-judge larger bench gave verdict in favour of dismissing the petitions while other three judges, Justice Rana Bhagwandas, Justice Sardar Muhammad Raza Khan and Justice Shakirullah Jan differed.

ORIGINAL POST: The main headline in The News today (Sept. 21, 2007) is revealing. It reads:

Oct. 6 set to “re-elect Musharraf.”

News reports in major newspapers do not usually use headlines with such obvious sarcasm. In fact, more than sarcasm there is desperation in the headline. It seems that like much of the nation, The News has also, finally, given up on the sham Presidential elections which are making a mockery of the Constitution, of the courts and, frankly, of the nation. The inverted commas in the headline say it all. The General wants to remain in power for his personal reasons, and he will do so no matter what, and no matter how. As the old Fifty-Fifty skit used to say: “karr lo jo karna hai”!

In a country where we change, amend, abuse, and concoct Constitutions at whims, it has always surprised me why we take Constitutional provisions so very seriously when it comes time to manipulate it. The spirit of the Constitution died long ago, what does it matter now whether the letter is followed or not?

Frankly, like The News, I am also disgusted with the process – and with everyone in it. While Gen. Musharraf has now lost all shred of process and is hell bent on keeping the Presidency by hook or by crook (and most likely by crook), the politicians and the media do not come across as much better either. The judiciary has fared better for now, but one wonders for how long.

What bugs me is the manipulation games everyone is playing with the Constitution. The media discussions are particularly depressing and people debate clauses but disregard the concepts behind the clauses. Everyone seems to relish the jorr torr, and no one wants to step back and say what does all of this mean for Pakistan.

There is absolutely no sense of what is “right” or “wrong”. Only, a discussion of what is ‘possible’ or ‘not possible.’ Politics may well be the ‘art of the possible’, but there is only that much abuse that even politics can take. Frankly, we have abused it enough.

Musharraf with his machinations to hold on to his kursi, the Chaudhries with their manipulations, the MMA with their fueling of fires, the MQM with its strongarm tactics, Benazir with her deals that seem really to center around getting the cases against her removed, even Nawaz Sharif with his less than convincing convictions …. None seems inspiring and none seems ready to rise to the moment.

Even the media seems to have lost its luster and relishes the minutia of dancing over a polity dying and being killed before its eyes. Engrossed in the sensationalism of the moment (whether it be a Presidential order, a Court adjournment, an Election Commission parchment, or merely the latest inanity from Sher Afghan) it seems to have no interest in the larger questions confronting the nation. The questions of democracy, the questions of extremism, the questions of civil war, the questions of economic disparity, the questions of civic disengagement, the questions of national lethargy in the face of all these questions.

I fear that I sound depressed. It is because I am. I have been in Pakistan the last three weeks, and personal reasons have kept me from writing much, or even visiting ATP much (thanks, Owais, for doing such a fine job managing the site), but I have thought often of writing about the daily political developments in this topi drama. I have not done so partly because I had even more pressing crises on my mind, but also because it has become increasingly difficult to look at all of this as anything except a political circus. But a very sad and depressing circus at that. This is not just playing poker with the fate of the nation, this is more like playing Russian roulette!

I made arrangements to be able to visit the Supreme Court during its current interesting cases. I decided not to go. Same reason. Its way too depressing. I am sorry, readers, to dump this on you, but its just one of those times. May these times end soon and may the sun shine again! Ameen! I have very little faith left in any of the major actors anymore, but I do have faith in the democratic spirit of ordinary Pakistanis. It will eventually triumph.

They say that democracy can sometimes lead to dirty politics. Yes, it can. But what we have just proved in Pakistan is that the lack of democracy leads to even dirtier politics.

120 responses to “Manipulated Elections: Karr lo jo karna hai

  1. Adil Najam says:

    Whatever the merit or otherwise of the Supreme Court’s decision, the violence and heavy handedness of the security apparatus today against lawyers and other protestors was not only totally uncalled for but yet another blot on a much maligned polity. History will judge Sept 28 as it might, but Sept 29 is already a dark day.

    According to Dawn:

    “ISLAMABAD, Sept 29 (Agencies) Police used batons and teargas to disperse hundreds of lawyers Saturday as the election commission scrutinised nomination papers of President General Pervez Musharraf and others for next week

  2. Deewana Aik says:

    Wusatullah B-B-C

    http://tinyurl.com/39puuw

  3. ali haider rizvi says:
  4. Jyoti says:

    One request, please make it a separate post so that the post- court order events can be discussed separately. i was searching since yesterday to read about the supreme court’s desicion and coulnd’t find this post as some browser problem sent the link to the bottom of the page.
    I think it’s unfair to blame the Pakistani Supreme Court or doubt its integrity. Supreme Court is bound by the constitution. The politicians changed the constitution to help Musharraf. The cort is supposed to dispense “justice” based on the country’s constitution. Based on your constitution, Mr. Musharraf can fight election in unform. If the constitution did not favor Musharraf and THEN Supreme Court gave this verdict, only then it could have been questioned.
    But Supreme Court has done great job for Pakistani Awam. It has shown that they can question and drag the dictator in court. Who could have thought of doing so just a few months ago?
    Maybe now is the time for Pakistani people to come forward and fight this battle through dmocratic means. If you want democracy, you MUST start being democratic/ using democratic means. You have got the biggest tool in your hands now; the fair judiciary. Use it, find loopholes in constitution and use them against imcompetent leaders who have done the same to usurp power.

  5. Atif Malik says:

    Hello

    I think Mr. Pervaiz Musharraf sorry Gen.Pervaiz Musharraf is one of the mysterias person i ever had seen. Since Oct 1999, he is having a one man show with a puppetary government of PML-Q (Lota Jamat). Anyway there is only one person who makes General panic and that is Justice Iftikhar Ahmed Choudhary. No one thought about the freedom of Supreme Court in the presence of General Musharraf. But the wall breaks and people of Pakistan had seen some democratic moments in their life. 28 Sep 2007 the day when same court announces the final wordings on the petition against General Musharraf’s two controvertial ranks.
    May God(Allah) help us to escape from this dectatorship rule (Amin).

    Atif Malik

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