| Islamabad:
It was supposed to be a typical commando action: flatten the
target with overwhelming speed and force, allowing zero response
time. But like most such planning, simulated in excited imagination
in isolation from slippery realities, it all went wrong. Terribly
wrong.
Chief
Justice of Pakistan (CJP) Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry, though
shell-shocked and shaken, held his ground in the intimidating
environment of General Pervez Musharraf’s camp office.
When confronted with impressive-looking packs of evidence on
his alleged misconduct, he demanded time for close examination.
When presented with a vast array of names of officials and politicians,
including the chief ministers of Punjab and Sindh who would
stand witness to his wrongdoings, he insisted to consult his
“brother judges.”
When
told that a “majority of his brother judges” wanted
him out and that the acting chief justice was getting ready
to take oath, he measured his words carefully and said that
hasty actions would not be good for the judiciary’s reputation.
When
asked to quietly resign and take an ambassadorial position “worthy
of his stature,” he tactfully declared that it sounded
interesting, but it was important to take his family into confidence.
Then
Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz was brought in by the president’s
military secretary to add to the effect of the incredible demand
of resignation and to show that everyone–government, military,
intelligence agencies – wanted him to step down.
Contrary
to the general perception that President Musharraf spent long
hours with the beleaguered chief justice, the two were together
less than half an hour. The rest of the time the chief justice
was in the company of intelligence chiefs who were going over
the details of the reference against him.
Sources close to him have told Newsline that Justice Chaudhry
simply wanted to get out of the camp office, which he described
as a “temporary jail” in those crucial hours.
That
instinctive desire, natural in most victims under crippling
pressure, was the turning point in the president’s attempt
to send the chief justice packing. It is unclear how the chief
justice who was supposed to give in and resign at the camp office
came out retaining his official position. Perhaps the president’s
aides thought that a three-month long campaign against Justice
Chaudhry, whose hardest blow was the audacious letter from Advocate
Naeem Bukhari, defaming the CJP all around, had softened him
enough to extort a signature. Or perhaps they erred in reading
his intentions as he was leaving the camp office, calculating
(wrongly) that the man had been cut at his knees and could only
crawl back to a humiliating retirement.
Indeed
the media strategy for the anticipated resignation was planned
on the assumption that the chief justice was history. An obsequious
Justice Chaudhry meeting the mighty General Musharraf wearing
khaki (the ultimate statement of his power) was filmed by government-controlled
television and the official photographer, and then released
to the media. This was sickeningly similar to the video clip
of the meeting of Dr Abdul Qadeer Khan with general Musharraf,
after which the humbled scientist made a confession on the national
hookup accepting his proliferation crimes and disappeared from
public view forever.
This
did not happen in the case of Chief Justice Chaudhry. Once out
of the confines of the imposing mansion in Rawalpindi, he made
a few calls to his close lawyer friends at the Supreme Court
Bar and the Lahore Bar telling them that a coup against him
was unfolding.
The calls were intercepted – sources close to him say
that he had told one of them that his phones were bugged –
and in order to forestall any mischief by the deposed chief
justice, brute state force came into action. He was taken in
and put under house arrest. His brother judges were sent a copy
of the reference – which sources claim was not even ready
at that moment in time – on which to start the proceedings
of the Supreme Judicial Council (SJC).
The president’s order that restrained the chief justice
from performing his functions reportedly was devised by the
law ministry, where the law secretary for weeks had quietly
levelled the ground for the day of presidential judgement on
the chief justice. The order, without any legal or constitutional
basis, was meant as a stopgap arrangement to block any attempt
by the chief justice to retaliate.
General
Musharraf was told by his legal advisors to press ahead with
the whole plan and that the chief justice’s goose had
been cooked. The chief ministers of Punjab and Sindh were told
to sternly put down any reaction to the chief justice’s
removal from the lawyers community. They apparently gave thumbs
up to the idea and reported back that not a soul would stir
in protest. General Musharraf was also told by his legal advisors
that the chief justice was a nasty man and the lawyers community
detested his arrogant, flamboyant and erratic ways. General
Musharraf was led to believe that if anything, the legal community
in Pakistan would heave a sigh of relief upon seeing the back
of “this man.” Media managers were advised to gag
all “hyper reporting of the event” and take stern
action against those who do not cooperate.
As
later events proved (see Military Imprecision), these were all
bad judgements exercised by men who knew nothing of the law,
or of the constitution and propriety of procedure. An operation
that was supposed to be wound up in hours spiralled out of hand
to become one of the gravest challenges to General Musharraf’s
authority.
Chief
Justice Chaudhry, who was supposed to be resting in oblivion,
is swooning in the glory of a saviour with the kind of spontaneous
backing and support from the public that can easily be the envy
of many an elected leader. It is because of this mess, and the
debacle that the ‘get Iftikhar’ mission has become,
that even brilliant righthand men of the establisment, such
as Sharifuddin Pirzada, have publicly disassociated themselves
from the whole episode. In fact, one source claims that when
General Musharraf contradicted Mr Pirzada’s press statement,
it was because Pirzada did not know about the reference. The
seasoned lawyer was so incensed that he threatened to resign.
Further,
the domestic debate triggered off by this sorry saga has gone
many steps ahead of the issues that the presidential reference
contains. The debate, fuelled by some of the most eminent and
brilliant legal minds of Pakistan, such as Fakhruddin G. Ibrahim,
Justice Wajihuddin Ahmed and Justice Tariq Mehmood, is now as
much about the independence of the judiciary as it is about
the autocracy of the system that General Musharraf continues
to project as “most fair and democratic.”
Sources
close to the president say that the country-wide protests and
a string of resignations, including one by Justice Jawad Khawaja
of the Lahore High Court, known for his uprightness and probity,
have taken him by utter surprise.
But “utter surprise” is an understatement. The President’s
House has been shaken to its very foundations. Insiders say
that most of the president’s time is taken up by this
particular incident. His irascibility level has increased, and
in his meetings with the Pakistan Muslim League leaders he repeatedly
savaged their inability to come out and defend the government’s
case.
It is easy to see where this spleen is coming from. All of the
traditional methods General Musharraf has used to bruise his
opposition, domestically and internationally, are not applicable
to the current challenge he is facing. Those on the streets
are not bearded men and veiled women demanding imposition of
Shariah; nor are they partisan political workers demanding the
return of their exiled leaders. They are lawyers and retired
justices protesting against what they believe is the most audacious
violation of the constitution and the final blow to the rule
of law. They can neither be branded as terrorists nor political
stooges – the two labels General Musharraf’s spin-doctors
have pasted generously on anyone speaking against the present
regime.
Tied to this is another problem: the issues that apparently
led to General Musharraf’s estrangement with Chief Justice
Chaudhry are all politically explosive and now are being debated
openly. Whether it is canceling of the Steel Mills privatisation,
his verdict on the New Murree Project, or cancellation of the
mini Golf Club plan in Islamabad on a public park, mega money
was involved in all, and the list of beneficiaries of such deals
all belonged to the ruling clique’s close circles.
The missing persons cases, already a major source of embarrassment
to the government, is also in far greater focus than before,
with the role of the intelligence agencies at the centre of
this attention. The same goes for police high-handedness, which
the chief justice dealt with brashly but effectively through
suo moto notices, forcing high-ranking officers to line up in
his court and produce results on his instant command. Police
brutality and attempts by high-ranking officials to save the
skins of their subordinates are now being seen from the prism
of Chief Justice Chaudhry’s experience.
Some members of Bars at the Tehsil levels and from remote areas
have erupted in applause for the chief justice purely out of
their derision against the police, which, for the first time,
was taken to task at the highest level since the country’s
creation.
But the breaking point in General Musharraf’s patience
came not on account of the stream of complaints coming from
police officials, intelligence representatives, land and money
dealers and top politicians whose family and business connections
spread across different institutions. According to sources close
to the chief justice, in his estimation, the final decision
to knock him off had something to do with his remarks about
General Musharraf’s uniform, which he had said, could
be decided both in the Supreme Court and in Parliament. The
president saw this as part of a more elaborate attempt to destabilise
him. Sources close to the president say that he saw this in
the context of letters that some of the retired generals, his
former advisors and politicians had written last year and later
released to the press asking him to relinquish his chief of
army staff position.
Later intelligence assessments that were brought before General
Musharraf to take a final decision on the chief justice concluded
that Justice Chaudhry could not be relied upon any longer and
posed a danger to the system’s stability.
Ironically, in attempting to dislodge the CJP, General Musharraf
has ended up achieving the very result he wanted to avoid: exposing
the weak side of his power base and dissolution of the myth
of its invincibility. The outpouring of support for the chief
justice was second only to the ferocity with which the protestors
were demanding return to genuine democracy. For days General
Musharraf’s advisors kept on insisting that this was a
bubble and would burst in no time. Their recommended response
was predictably shortsighted: beat the protestors back and gag
the media. Both courses of action backfired, blackening the
government’s image and bleeding its credibility. The media
hit back against attempts to put the kibosh on the daily events
coverage and grabbed instant international headlines; the Bars
protested even more violently and sent shockwaves across the
country.
In a string of hurriedly called meetings at the camp office,
an instant review was done and it was concluded that the situation
was bad and that the tack needed to be changed. However, by
the time this realisation came about, the damage was already
done: General Musharraf’s advisors had not just cooked
a sorry soup, they had sent him in the thick of it, headlong.
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