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Exactly
what the nature of the state is today - as opposed to what was envisaged
by Jinnah, argues the country's liberal intelligentsia - was made
very clear by General Musharraf when he recently addressed members
of the electronic media: "Pakistan is an ideological state;
it is not a secular state. It is the Islamic Republic of Pakistan."
This unequivocal declaration came on the heels of the final verdict
on the insertion of the religion column in new passports. Not only
will Pakistani citizens have their faith etched in their passports,
the state's religious identity will be engraved on the face of each
document as well.
So
much for Jinnah's speech to the Constituent Assembly on August 11,
1947: "You may belong to any religion or caste or creed - that
has nothing to do with the business of the State
"
Notch
one up for the country's rabid rightwing who have since the Quaid's
death relentlessly attempted to reinterpret his philosophy, indeed,
reinvent his image. That Pakistan's religious and political rightwing
have gradually managed to translate what was, until a few years
ago largely nuisance value (formidable though it may have intermittently
appeared) into tangible electoral and street power has become increasingly
obvious.
Beginning
with their clean sweep in the Frontier, their sizeable victory in
Balochistan, and their substantial numbers in the National Assembly
after the 2002 elections (and most recently their success in the
bye-election in Malakand, ostensibly a PPP stronghold), the Musharraf-led
establishment has given the mullah what even Zia-ul-Haq did not:
he has brought the fundamentalist parties into the mainstream.
According
to an International Crisis Group (ICG) report, "With [the government's]
patronage the religious right is fast expanding its political space."
Said Afrasiyab Khattak, formerly of the Human Rights Commission
of Pakistan, "[the religious parties] phenomenal rise in October
2002 was not just coincidental, but a part of the political plans
of the military."
In the vacuum created by the absence of the PPP and PML (N)
leaders to whom Musharraf refused a level playing field alongside
his dispensation's hand-picked contenders for power, the mullah,
ever-organised and pumped up by the atrocities committed by western
powers against the Muslim 'ummat' in the wake of 9/11, was catapulted
to the country's political foreground as a serious contender in
the electoral race.
Since
then he has never looked back - and the government's response to
his harangues has been retreat, rescind, side-step.
Consider the positions taken and backtracked on by the general and
his dispensation. No sooner does Musharraf announce his admiration
for Turkey's Ataturk (and the country's progressive element waits
with bated breath for the general to cast himself in Ataturk's image
and deliver the people from the omnipresent spectre of extremism)
that Musharraf has second thoughts: soon he is seen going to pains
to state that he does not share the reformist Turkish general's
ideological and political sentiments.
Next
comes the proposed amendment to the blasphemy law (and that too
a relatively insignificant one). As soon as the mullahs start to
agitate, the amendment is hastily withdrawn.
The pledge to register madrassahs and bring their curriculum
into conformity with mainstream academic curriculae meanwhile, remains
just that to date - a promise. In fact, rather than enforce the
proposed Madrassah Registration and Regulation Ordinance of 2001,
the government has withdrawn the ban imposed by the PPP in 1990
on madrassah registration. "To appease the clergy and to gain
the religious parties' support
President Musharraf placed
madrassah reform on the backburner," reads the ICG report "Most
madrassahs are still unregistered, and the government now assures
the clergy that it will not interfere in the madrassahs' internal
affairs."
The
PPP's bill on karo kari submitted to the Assembly is trashed even
before debate, but much credit is taken for the watered-down, insubstantial
government-sponsored bill subsequently passed. When government party
PML(Q) National Assembly member Kashmala Tariq submits a bill with
a view to amend the law in order to make karo kari a compoundable
offence, members of her own party join hands with the MMA Parliamentarians
to kill the bill. Meanwhile Musharraf, while acknowledging that
he "appreciates" the bill, says it failed to muster support
because it was "inadequately presented."
And as the mullahs' attacks on the Aga Khan University Examination
Board - a significant step in bolstering the quality of local education
- set up courtesy a government of Pakistan Ordinance issued in November
2002, gain momentum, the government once again goes on the defensive.
According to recent reports, the establishment has, in fact, considerably
narrowed the scope of the Board's operations.
Now it is the acquiescence to the reinsertion of the religion
column in the new machine readable passports - at a cost of millions
of rupees to the Pakistani exchequer considering the number of passports
that have already been issued, not to mention the headache for citizens
who have already availed of the new documents. Said Samina Ahmed
of the ICG, "The decision was clearly dictated by the need
to retain the MMA's support, within and outside parliament, if the
military-dictated political order is to survive."
As for the government's exit strategy - it seems to be 'pass
the buck.' Said the President after the commission constituted to
debate the religion column announced their decision, "It is
the ministerial committee's decision and we accept it."
Subsequently, while addressing a group of PML(Q) Parliamentarians,
Musharraf is reported to have said, "you are peoples' representatives
and you must play a role as leaders to guide people towards the
goal of a dynamic and progressive Islamic state."
Pakistan's information Minister Shaikh Rashid for his part,
attempted face-saving for the Shaukat Aziz government, stating that
the decision to debate the religion column was inherited by Aziz
since it had been taken by his predecessor, Zafarullah Jamali.
If the government's
hasty retreats on major issues each time the mullahs raise their
voice is not ample evidence of the latter's growing power, their
ability to muster street power is unarguable. The MMA rally in Lahore
on March 23 may not have comprised a million people as claimed,
but it did muster huge numbers - and compelled the ARD to cancel
its own proposed rally the same day. The Lahore rally was followed
by others (albeit smaller ones) in Karachi and Peshawar, and once
again the numbers were enough to engender concern in liberal hearts.
For the fundamentalist parties, the current status quo makes for
a win-win situation. Their protests against Musharraf's uniform
notwithstanding, it is in their interest that he remain in power.
As long as Benazir Bhutto and Nawaz Sharif can be kept at bay, the
religious groups offer one of the few alternatives on offer in the
country's political set-up. Just how much lip service the MMA's
demand for a return to democracy - and in this context, of Bhutto
and Sharif to the country - is, can be gauged by a recent statement
made by Maulana Fazlur Rehman of the JUI, a component of the MMA.
After Musharraf's ostensibly conciliatory gestures towards the PPP
leaders and widespread speculation about Bhutto's return to Pakistan,
the Maulana accused President Musharraf of promoting the PPP and
weakening the religious parties because, according to him, "He
considers the PPP the only moderate force in the country and wants
to please Washington." And the religious lobby's anti-west,
pro-Islam stance resounds louder with every Iraqi/Palestinian Afghan
death, at coalition/ American/ Israeli hands. In fact, never before
perhaps, has the global climate been more conducive to their professed
cause.
For Musharraf, meanwhile, the more visible the mullah, the greater
the bogey he can present to the US and the western world about the
threat of extremism which he contends only a strong military man
- not to mention an "enlightened moderate" can thwart.
"The bogey of the mullah has served the general well in his
dealings with the west, particularly in the United States where
key policy-makers appear to have internalised the belief that Musharraf
alone can keep the mullahs at bay," said Samina Ahmed. Add
to that the military mindset to which are intrinsic the Kashmir
cause and the 'strategic depth' theory (Afghanistan), and to which
the extremist element is inextricably linked, and the mullah-military
nexus seems almost umbilical in nature.
With its rhetoric going in one direction and the one step
forward, two back approach adopted by the government, particularly
with regard to the religious right-wing, going another, which way
the country is headed remains a moot point - but the indicators
are disturbing.
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