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Regardless
of the outcome of the present duel between Islamabad and Peshawar
in the Supreme Court, the adoption of the Hasba Bill by the NWFP
Assembly indicates a critical stage in Pakistan's history. On the
one hand the bill offers a preview of the theocratic dispensation
the tradionalist clerics wish to impose on the people of this country.
And, on the other hand, the proposed enactment marks a watershed
in the religio-political lobby's drive to capture the state and
refashion it to suit its narrow interest.
The
Hasba Bill, which its supporters are already treating as a settled
law, offers a fairly adequate idea of what Pakistan will become
if the pro-theocracy lobby succeeds in its designs. The bill envisages
an alternative structure of power and dispensation of justice raised
on populist props. The preamble says that an Hasba institution is
necessary, not in fulfilment of any religious injunction but for
protecting the rights of different sections of society including
women, minorities and small children. The formulation is a classic
example of planning to deprive the under-privileged of their rights
under the slogan of protecting them.
The
desire to replace the existing state structure is evident from the
organisation of the Mohtasib's hierarchy as well as the vast area
of Hasba authority. The bill provides for a provincial Mohtasib
and identical officers at district and tehsil levels. This structure
guarantees the Hasba institution's autonomous character, and its
independence of the existing administration.
The
area of operation for the Mohtasib is virtually without any limits.
The Mohtasib is expected to do what the entire anti-corruption department
and the accountability bureau are supposed to do, and that too summarily.
He will supervise respect for Islamic morality and behaviour and
ensure that the media serves Islamic values. He will not only prevent
departments and officials from indulging in activities that are
contrary to the Shariah but will also issue guidelines for making
functionaries more efficient. Except for matters pending in courts,
agreements with foreign governments or matters relating to different
services and the laws relating to them, the Mohtasib will assist
the provincial administration in making its task easier and more
effective, which means the entire administration will be subject
to Mohtasib's diktat. The
role of the Mohtasib is not confined to offering advice, he will
have the power to have his orders implemented by relevant authorities,
and if the latter do not carry out his bidding he could move the
government for action against the offender. The provincial Mohtasib
will also have the power to punish for his contempt. The underlying
philosophy of the Hasba Bill is transfer of authority that can be
exercised by a collective, through a process of consultation and
consensus-building to a single individual as the decision-maker.
True, the Mohtasib will have an Advisory Council but he will head
the outfit and personally nominate its members. The bill makes sure
that the members of the Advisory Council, namely two ulema, two
lawyers and two grade 20 officials, are the Mohtasib's yes men.
Of course the advice of the council will not be binding on the Mohtasib.
The catalogue of the Mohtasib's powers is truly mind-boggling.
He will have both executive and judicial powers and the bill pays
full respect to the theocratic dispensation's reliance on vague
formulations and concepts that can be subjectively interpreted.
For instance, the bill says the Mohtasib will supervise Islamic
morality and norms. What these norms are, have not been defined
and the possibilities of the Mohtasib interpreting the Islamic values
in his discretion are obvious.
The
provision that says that the Mohtasib will ensure observance of
Islamic moral values at public places is pregnant with possibilities
of imposing on citizens a rule by vigilantes. Every space outside
the four walls of the house is public place and that includes parliament
house, court, educational premises, market, entertainment places,
parks and roadside. Thus, everywhere, there will be baton-wielding
policemen (it is doubtful if the Hasba authority will countenance
policewomen) to impose on the people a code that will largely be
based on the authorities' interpretation of religion.
The
bill also tries to undermine a regime based on law by suggesting
extra-legal concepts. The bill uses the expression 'discouragement'
while referring to extravagance, beggary, employment of small children
and un-Islamic social customs. How will the Hasba force discourage
practices for which the law does not provide specific remedies or
punishments? Obviously the Hasba police will be required to make
people behave in accordance with the whims of the baton-wearer whether,
he has the law on his side or whether he is acting outside the law.
References to the Mohtasib's power to prevent adulteration, artificial
increase in prices and cost of living and bribery in government
departments opens a wide field for the Mohtasib to rule by his whim
and caprice.
What the bill contains is, however, less sinister than what it portends.
The state establishment, especially the military elite, cannot ignore
the fact that it is confronted with a conservative challenge, which
is far more serious than anything the country has ever faced from
this quarter. Between 1948 and 2002, the state was challenged by
conservative clerics who had no share in the power structure (except
for 1977-86 when they colluded with General Zia) and commanded the
allegiance of a tiny part of the population, though their capacity
to mobilise their following and use its street power gave them strength
in excess of their numbers. Even then, the state never chose to
meet the threat from them in a headlong clash. Instead, it yielded
to them significant concessions every few years or so.
The situation now is different. If the religio-political forces
had been helped to proliferate and acquire money and guns by General
Zia, his successor in power facilitated their entry into the halls
of power. The Afghan war, the military regime's short-sighted policy
of pushing mainstream political parties out of contention and the
rise of madrassah power have greatly strengthened the organisations
engaged in the power game under the banner of religion. Thus the
military-dominated government at the centre has to reckon not only
with an MMA government in Peshawar but also a considerably reinforced
pro-theocracy opinion across the country.
The situation in the NWFP in particular does not favour Islamabad.
The MMA's accession to strength in that province may have been due
to the military establishment's choice of its partners but once
installed in power they have created important parallel interests
and acquired the support of the establishment's permanent hangers-on.
Some of the factors that contributed to the triumph of mullahs in
the election 2002 are still operating in their favour. Afghanistan
has not been stabilised and what is more important the Taliban are
not totally out of the reckoning. The military operations in the
tribal areas have given the population of NWFP and FATA an indigenous
cause of alienation from Islamabad. A substantial part of the MMA
following comprises elements whose choices are determined more by
their dislike of Islamabad's policies than by their trust in the
new breed of faith-healers.
Besides, it is not very clear that the military has finally decided
to ditch the mullah who is still its strategic ally. General Musharraf's
rhetoric about moderate or liberal Islam has little organised social
backing. The conservative religious mass is bound and held together
largely by belief. The people belonging to this large group are
in close contact and interact regularly. They have the essential
attributes of a united group. They are prepared to die for their
belief. On the other hand, those sporting the badge of liberal Islam
have neither a common platform nor a unity of purpose. Their actions
are not motivated by belief A sizeable section of the liberals is
wary of the government's rhetoric because it rejects the idea of
controlled democracy or is reluctant to allow the centre the right
to interfere with a province's rights.
In these circumstances, Islamabad's capacity to deal with
the MMA challenge is manifestly limited. The options supposed to
be available to the federal government, such as killing the Hasba
Bill under judicial verdict, dismissal of the provincial government
or dissolution of the NWFP Assembly cannot be easily defended and
will only aggravate the situation. Perhaps the only viable option
is to call a general election within the next few months, but, before
that, the ruling group will have to find ways of making peace with
the major political parties (and that means, with Benazir Bhutto
and Nawaz Sharif), without which it will win neither the contest
of the ballot nor the battle in the street.
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