|
We
have recently found a section of our society in the grip of an euphoria
generated by the release of a man who, obviously by arrangement,
was under detention in a five-star hospital where he enjoyed far
more comfort and care than in his premarital home. It did not matter
that he was being held on multiple murder and corruption charges,
and that in the UK and Switzerland he had been found guilty of using
black money. It also did not matter that he is a politician only
by virtue of marriage and was the most disliked man in the country
for his corrupt practices, which twice led to the dismissal of his
wife's government. His release on bail, although a victory against
a highly questionable judiciary and prosecution, which could only
conclude one of the many cases against him in eight years, does
not in any way amount to a sacrifice for democracy. While it is
not surprising that the rank and file of the PPP, which is now tuned
only into the practice of getting into power by any means, sensed
blood and celebrated, it is however astonishing that the information
media enthusiastically undertook the task of inflating a balloon
which could only burst. It has already become abundantly clear from
his press statements, interviews and speeches that this is a man
who has no calibre of any sort and will never fit the role that
he is being projected into.
These
events are significant only in so far as to identify our political
parameters and show that there is no place in them for honesty,
integrity and dignity. Things have gone steadily and terribly wrong.
General Zia broke his promise, made on oath to hold elections in
90 days on the grounds firstly, that accountability was not complete,
and secondly, that he had to impose 'nizam-e-mustafa.' Having failed
to convince on both these counts, he resorted to massive corruption
of all institutions so that there would be no challenge to his dictatorship.
In the process, politics became his special target and he spent
a huge amount of public funds on buying the loyalties of politicians,
including pirs, mirs, sardars, waderas, Khans, Chaudharies, etc.,
all of whom had been collected in a bogus Majlis-e-Shoora.
The Benazir government that followed lacked the ability to impress
with its performance and clean up politics. It therefore could only
operate in the same groove as Zia. Benazir had to coerce, isolate
and even bribe the parliamentarians of her own party to prevent
them from selling her out in the vote of no-confidence against her.
The practice of politics for personal gain had become well entrenched
by the time Nawaz Sharif became Prime Minister. Being an instrument
of the Zia modus operandi, he saw nothing wrong with the corruption
of politics and made his contribution to the practice. Thus blackmail,
betrayal and a total lack of honesty, principles and beliefs has
become the norm that is being resorted to without any qualms in
politics, and individuals who are not only under trial for malpractices
but have been absconding or found guilty and imprisoned, hold cabinet
posts.
We
have a military government again (when have we not had one?) , which
as usual came to put things right but has sunk in the quagmire of
malpractices that it inherited. It has adorned a tattered mantle
of democracy that hides nothing. It stumbles and blunders along
a rocky road, surviving on appeasement and by turning a blind eye
to all the evils that flourish under its umbrella. The aim clearly
is to stay on in power by any means rather than to lay down parameters
of politics and governance based on transparency and the will to
serve the people. The President has admitted that his referendum
was rigged and that 80 per cent of the parliamentarians are corrupt.
The Prime Minister is still unknown in the constituencies from where
he got elected by a landslide. Indeed, they even tried to blow him
up there. As for the opposition, it is insipid and exhausted, surviving
on secret deals with the government and watering at the mouth for
a piece of the cake before it is all gobbled up.
This
has led to the collapse of standards all around and degeneration
in the thought process of the people. Those active in the political
field are motivated only by greed and self-interest. From top to
bottom, participants are only looking for a buck. To them, success
means getting into power by any means and then making hay. Thus,
all flock to those political leaders and parties that are experts
at somehow manoeuvering themselves into power. It does not matter
that they have no ideology or any plans for serving the people as
long as they are on the side of the rulers, whoever they may be.
We find even those politicians who are absconding abroad and hiding
from imprisonment in criminal cases enjoying popularity simply because
they hold out the promise of power. This has given a new meaning
to the word leadership, which absolves them from being in the field
and in front. It allows them to be safe and secure in luxury across
the oceans while their followers face all the hazards on their own.
All they need to do is to convince their followers, through purchased
publicity, that they shall return in triumph to rule the country
and all shall then have a ball. It has become impossible to have
legislatures worth the name and governments that are clean, capable
and effective.
The days of manifestoes, ideology, loyalty and commitment
to the people are now a remote memory. Dignity and honour have become
handicaps in the present political dispensation and those displaying
any trace thereof are considered to be outdated and out of touch.
Ghalib perhaps had the current political scenario in mind when he
said something to the effect that even infamy brings fame.
The
more disgraced a politician today, the greater his stock in trade
and the more the people flock to him in the hope of feeding off
the crumbs that spill over from his bowl. A thick skin is the basic
prerequisite of a politician today. He must have no guilty conscience
despite being corrupt to the core and be able to ignore all scandals
and accusations of wrongdoing. The practice of resigning, even in
the face of serious charges, must be unknown to him. David Blunket,
the former British Home Secretary and second most powerful man in
British politics after the Prime Minister, recently resigned after
being accused of misusing his powers by recommending a visa application.
Senator Gary Hart withdrew from the American Presidential contest
after the exposure of his illicit relationship with a woman. British
Foreign Secretary Lord Profumo resigned due to the disclosure of
his relationship with Christine Keeler, of Ayub Khan fame. And so
it goes in the profession of politics tempered with honour. These
lessons have no more effect on our politicians than water on a duck's
back. They choose to wallow in the filth they themselves create,
rather than go home. One has to hang his head in shame when identified
as a politician these days.
In this clearly hopeless state of affairs, there is a distinct ray
of hope, albeit remote. The turnout figures of recent elections
indicate that no more than 20 per cent of the voters cast their
votes or show any interest in the current brand of politics and
mode of governance. Twenty percent of the registered voters amounts
to roughly 10 per cent of the entire population. It must, therefore,
be assumed that 90 per cent of the people are unhappy about the
liberties being taken with their lives and future. We have seen
this happen in the Ukraine recently and before that in Georgia.
Will those holding the reins take note? 
|