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The
passage of the National Security Council Act, 2004 has broken many
a tradition. It has altered the civil-military equation to the advantage
of the latter, it has ascribed to the armed forces a role inconsistent
with the constitution, it is a law against the basic structure of
the constitution, it seeks subordination of civil authority by law,
and during its passage all norms of democracy and parliamentary
practice were flouted.
The
establishment has been toying with promoting and pressing for the
concept of the NSC since many a year, but it has been the resistance
of civil society that held it at bay until April 14, 2004. In 1985
General Zia introduced it as Article 152A in the RCO, but the Parliament
of that time had the strength and moral courage to delete it as
Article 18 in the Eighth Amendment. On January 6, 1997 the NSC reemerged
under Farooq Leghari, only to be lost again under Sharif. After
the October 12, 1999 takeover it resurfaced once more on November
6, 1999, and was reconstituted by the National Security Council
Order 2001 (Chief Executives Order No. 5 of 2001).
In
distinct contrast, the mind of the founding fathers is reflected
in an office memorandum (No. 272/of/48) issued by the cabinet secretariat
dated September 25, 1948 from Karachi. The office memorandum constitutes
a defence committee of the cabinet under the Prime Minister. This
is similar to the DCC that existed before the passage of this Act.
The NSC is against the grain of a parliamentary system and an intrusion
of an extra-parliamentary force upon the preserve of Parliament.
When
the NSC proposal was put to vote, it offered civil society a unique
opportunity to place the NSC under wraps - but for its 'turncoats.'
It is for the first time that the internal contradictions between
the civil-military bureaucracy and their traditional political allies,
the religious right, surfaced. The main contributing factors for
the split lay in the uneven application of the NAB law, the devolution
plan and the Police Order 2002 for the civil bureaucracy, and the
international events for the religious right. But the turncoats
with their NAB cases, loan defaults and rank opportunism were there
to provide more than a helping hand to complete the surrender of
Parliament. Never in history has any Parliament been in such haste
to abdicate its powers and sovereignty.
The bill was laid before the National Assembly on April 2,
2004 and referred to the standing committee. The House was adjourned
at 1: 00 p.m and the standing committee was summoned for a meeting
at 1:30 PM - on that very day. The members of the opposition in
the committee were not served notice, the general discussion on
the bill in the assembly was circumvented with an altercation with
the opposition and by 2:00 pm the committee had passed the bill.
Upon transmission to the Senate the rules were suspended and general
discussion of the bill was taken up. Two motions of the opposition
of referring the bill to the standing committee and circulating
it for public opinion, were disallowed. There was an agreement that
four days of general discussion on the bill would take place. On
the second day a situation was created where the opposition staged
a token walkout and the bill was passed in three minutes (as reported
in the press). Thus on April 14, 2004 the surrender was complete.
The new law is in violation of Article 245 of the constitution.
This article states that the armed forces shall be under the directions
of the federal government. It ascribes three functions for the armed
forces under the constitution, namely, to defend Pakistan against
external aggression, threat of war and subject to law, act in aid
of civil power when called upon to do so. Thus it is clear that
the authors of the constitution had placed them under the political
will and assigned no role of policy formulation or governance.
The effect of this Act will be that the basic structure of
the constitution i.e. federal, parliamentary and democratic will
be altered. The federal character and provincial autonomy are infringed
upon as "government" in the Act means federal and provincial
governments. Thereby, the NSC is able to consult, formulate recommendations
and do crises management of provincial governments. It replaces
the parliamentary system with a quasi-presidential system, the return
to One-Unit. This Act has to be read with the discretionary powers
of the President conferred under the Seventh Constitutional Amendment
Act. The President as chairman of the NSC and as chairman of the
National Command Authority becomes an over-emphasised office with
no check or balance, in total negation of the parliamentary system.
The democratic character of the constitution is affected the moment
the political will is made subordinate.
The extent and ambit of the new law was described by General
Musharraf when in August he said, "the National Assembly consists
of 342 members, hence decision-making is not possible, but a cross-section
of views can emerge. These views would then be considered by the
NSC in formulating policy." He again said on June 30, 2003
in Los Angeles, "the LFO will ensure a vital role to be played
by the NSC."
The present government talks of the NSC being present in
the US and India. What they forget is the fact that these are societies
where the armed forces are subordinate to the political will and
are not contenders for power. Further, no uniformed person is a
member of these councils. In Turkey, the situation is different.
The chief of general staff is appointed on the advise of the council
of ministers, the NSC formed under Article 118 of the constitution
is only an advisory body on the policy of national security - the
word used is "policy." The advise tendered is sent to
the council of ministers which may accept or reject the same, the
final arbiter as to whether the advise is acceptable or not to the
cabinet, which is answerable to Parliament. The concept of the supremacy
of Parliament has been preserved in the Turkish model.
The amendment passed in the National Assembly that refers
the recommendations of the NSC to either House has made matters
worse, it has reduced the houses to the status of an implementation
authority. It states, "any proposal on an issue deemed to be
of national importance which requires implementation shall be referred
by the council to the National Assembly or the Senate for appropriate
action." This means that Parliament will take appropriate action
for its implementation; it cannot discuss or override the proposal
that has been sent to it. Thus it is only an implementation authority
and nothing more. Further, in case there is a proposal for the dissolution
of the National Assembly under Article 58(2)(b), what will the position
be? Will the Senate be able to override this proposal?
To say that the NSC
will prevent further martial laws is belied by history. The 1956
and 1962 constitutions of Iskander Mirza and Ayub Khan were products
of the thinking of the establishment, but in the end the authors
of these constitutions themselves asked for their abrogation. The
chief of army staff was also made a cabinet minister but this did
not prevent the imposition of martial law. In the scheme of the
1973 Constitution there are only two players in the power equation:
the President and the Prime Minister. The role of the armed forces
has been defined in Article 245.
The Act states that a National Security Council shall be established
to serve as a forum for consultation on matters of national security
including sovereignty, integrity, defence and security of the state.
All these terms are vague and each itself carries wide implications
leaving no sphere of governance beyond their ambit. The icing on
the cake comes with the term 'crisis management.' This is an all-encompassing
omnibus phrase and covers everything under the sun. Thus the NSC
will formulate policy on any and every aspect of government policy.
In conclusion the new law a) prescribes a role for the armed
forces that the Constitution of 1973 does not envisage b) formalises
the role of the armed forces in the constitutional functioning and
policy-making of the federal government c) infringes on the sovereignty
of Parliament d) makes the Prime Minister and his cabinet subordinate
to its policies e) its ambit as defined in the Act does not confine
it to matters of only national security f) through inference introduces
a unitary form of government g) infringes on provincial autonomy
h) a large number of its members are the appointees of the President
i) by presiding over the NSC, the President makes the Prime Minister
an equal among equals, which is a negation of the parliamentary
system.
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