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Disarray
and confusion continues to grip the government of Prime Minister
Mir Zafarullah Khan Jamali after he scraped through to the top slot
by a razor-thin margin of one vote after the military engineered
the defection of ten opposition members. Within one week of its
inception, the coalition has turned into a minority in the National
Assembly, fighting for its survival in the face of an aggressive
and powerful opposition. The parting of ways with the Mutahida Qaumi
Movement, the crisis of the formation of a government in Sindh and
the opposition MMA taking over the administration in the key North
West Frontier province, have further exacerbated Jamali's woes.
The self-effacing Jamali, currently presiding over a fractured coalition
comprising several wrangling groups and defectors, is confronted
with a situation not experienced by any other civilian leader. "It
is like a rudderless ship with no policy direction," says a
senior government official. The conflict between the National Assembly
and the military president over the changes in the constitution
remains unresolved, raising serious questions about the sustainability
of the new setup.
The defection of 10 PPPP members, that salvaged the
situation for Jamali after protracted negotiations between the PML-(Q)
and the MMA, broke down a day before the National Assembly was convened.
The talks apparently collapsed as the MMA stuck to its crucial demand
that President Musharraf give a firm date for stepping down from
the post of chief of army staff. According to highly placed political
sources, General Musharraf had agreed to drop the National Security
Council, but was not prepared to concede to the MMA's main demand.
The Islamic leaders said they just wanted the President to give
a tentative date for the shedding of his military uniform . "We
cannot accept a President in uniform," declared Qazi Hussain
Ahmed. It was difficult for the MMA leaders to compromise on this
central demand because of pressure from the hard-line newly elected
legislators.
The military authorities, however, pulled out the required number
of votes by manipulating a split in the PPPP. Jamali's "victory"
was made possible after President Musharraf, in a highly controversial
move, suspended the ban on floor-crossing allowing opposition members
to switch sides. The division between the PPP and the five-party
MMA alliance also "played a major role in helping the pro-military
leader to secure a majority."
It is quite apparent that Faisal Saleh Hayat, Rao Sikandar and some
other PPPP defectors were in contact with the military authorities
even before the elections. Faisal, a former federal minister, has
been charged by NAB for defaulting on the repayment of loans worth
millions of rupees from nationalised banks and had spent months
in jail, making him extremely vulnerable to pressure. He was initially
offered the foreign ministry, but preferred the interior portfolio.
It is still not clear whether NAB will pursue the corruption cases
against the new interior minister; a senior general walked up to
him during the oath-taking ceremony to congratulate the "loan
defaulter" for what he described as a "courageous move
in the national interest!"
Rao Sikandar, an old PPP stalwart, is a personal friend of President
Musharraf and was on the list of favourite candidates prepared by
Tariq Aziz and the ISI prior to the polling. It is not surprising
that he has been given the important defence portfolio. The other
pillar of the fractious coalition government is Aftab Ahmed Sherpao,
a former chief minister of NWFP and now the head of his own faction
of the PPP. Wanted on several charges of corruption, Sherpao fled
the country after the military take-over and was allowed to return
only after he struck a deal with the military authorities. A retired
major, Sherpao's contacts in the army top brass helped his political
rehabilitation. He was cleared of most corruption charges, through
the courts in record time to facilitate his participation in the
elections and was even considered for prime minstership at one point.
Despite all this manipulation and horse-trading engineered by the
intelligence agencies, Jamali barely managed to scrape through.
His election came as a relief to President Musharraf who clearly
wanted a pliable prime minister in place. However, Jamali's controversial
one-vote majority raises doubts about the long term survival of
the new civilian government. The soft spoken, stoutly-built Jamali
has been the military's preferred candidate for Pakistan's top civilian
job because of his pliant nature. A tribal leader from Pakistan's
most backward region, southwestern Balochistan, Mr. Jamali has a
reputation of being an establishment figure who is unlikely to take
any stand against the country's powerful military President. He
is also Pakistan's first elected prime minister from Balochistan.
An easy-going and experienced politician, Mr. Jamali has served
three brief terms as chief minister in his native province, most
recently in 1996. He has also been a federal minister in the military
regime of the late General Ziaul Haq in the mid-1980s. His friends
call him "Jabal" (mountain) - a nickname earned as a young
man for not crying after a bad injury during a hockey match.
It is quite apparent that the ostensibly civilan government will
work under General Musharraf's presidential shadow. Jamali has promised
to continue President Musharraf's economic and foreign policies
saying that Pakistan has benefited from military rule. He pledged
Pakistan's continued support for the US-led war on terrorism, "Pakistan
has become a frontline state, and will remain one," said Jamali.
"Pakistan is going ahead as a respectable country."
In an address to the nation a day before Jamali's election, President
Musharraf claimed credit for taking the country back to civilian
rule. But he also issued a veiled warning to the new civil administration
that it should not deviate from his policies. He said his 1999 takeover
of the country saved Pakistan from a political crisis and that the
incoming civilian government should build on his achievements. "The
new government should pick up the reins of power with full resolve
- the ray of hope which we have shown should be spread across the
length and breadth of the country," declared President Musharraf.
President Musharraf was sworn in for another five-year term, the
same day the parliament met for the first time since his coup. While
promising that he would be handing over power to the newly elected
civilian leader, the President made it crystal clear that he is
still the final authority on most matters, particularly in foreign
and economic policy issues.
Jamali, meanwhile, faces a tough challenge from a formidable and
vocal opposition in parliament, particularly from the religious
right, in defending the constitutional amendments that grant the
President extensive powers and institutionalise the role of the
army. The majority of the deputies, including some who voted for
him, have rejected the changes and support a debate on the issue.
The installation of an elected parliament and a civilian administration
has radically changed the country's political dynamics. Despite
promises by Jamali to follow the line, many observers, predict intensifying
conflict between the parliament and the President, not only on the
issue of constitutional amendments, but also regarding his role
as army chief. The Islamic leaders have warned that they will not
accept a president in military uniform. "If General Musharraf
is serious in handing over power to the elected representatives
then he should announce his retirement from the post of army chief
and withdraw all the unilateral amendments he made in the constitution,"
said Qazi Hussain Ahmed, leader of the main opposition Islamic alliance.
He has also called for the reversal of Pakistan's support to the
United States and the withdrawal of American troops from the country.
"By allowing the United States to set up its bases and allowing
the FBI to conduct raids on Pakistani soil, President Musharraf
has sold the independence of the country," said the Jamaat
leader.
The MMA and the PPPP have identical views on the restoration of
the constitution that existed before the military take-over. The
widening differences between them, on foreign policy issues, particularly
the government's support to the United States in the war on terrorism,
however, may give the beleagured government some respite. "
It will be a weak government and a very strong opposition,"
said Khawaja Asif, a PML (N) leader.
After losing its fragile majority within a week, the government
has reopened negotiations with the MMA, but it is too late for a
deal as the constitution with the changes has already been enforced.
President Musharraf's stubbornness not to get the amendments ratified
by parliament has threatened the new political set-up. "The
President should understand he will also be removed if the system
is wound up," said a senior MMA leader. Despite it's current
weak position, the government may continue to survive for some time
as the opposition is not in the position to form the government
either.
Though MMA leaders have given assurances that they will not let
the government fail, a major test for Jamali will come in two months
time when he is required to take a vote of confidence in the National
Assembly. The present political situation is similar to the 1950s,
when governments would change overnight.
The political crisis deepened further with the continuing instability
in Sindh, where the assembly session was arbitrarily postponed indefinitely
after the failure of the pro-military group to form the government.
Except for the Punjab, the PML (Q) have lost ground in the other
two provinces. With the MMA forming the government in the NWFP as
well as being a crucial political partner in the coalition in Balochistan,
"Jabal Khan" faces a mountainous task ahead.
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