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General
Musharraf has galvanized the opposition with his sacking of Justice
Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry. The furore over the dismissal of the
country's top judge for alleged misconduct has exposed the fissure
that had widened in the preceding years, fuelling outrage against
General Musharraf and the military. Lawyers are now joined by rights
campaigners and political activists, in a show of solidarity with
the ousted chief justice, who has become a symbol of the pro-democracy
movement in the country. The protests have become much more frequent
and widespread, plunging the country into its most serious political
crisis since the military seized power in a bloodless coup in October
1999.
For
the first time in Pakistan's history, the judiciary is up in arms
against the government. Several judges have resigned in protest
over the president's unilateral dismissal of the chief justice,
which they term "illegal' and " unconstitutional."
"The general has started the war within for only one reason:
to perpetuate his rule," says Dr Tariq Hassan," a senior
attorney. "By doing so he has not only denigrated the highest
judicial institution in the country, but has also caused grievous
harm to his own constituency - the army."
With
opposition anger still raging over his dismissal of the chief justice,
the crisis is exacerbated by the growing stridency among Islamic
radicals who strive to enforce their own brand of a rigid, conservative
Islamic order on the country, taking vigilante justice to the streets
of the capital. Wielding sticks, bearded students of a local seminary
have been roaming around Islamabad raiding video shops. Zealots
have also become an increasingly common sight at the capital's traffic
lights, where they warn women to stop driving, as it is a "sin"
against Islam. Hundreds of students of Madrassah Hafsa, shrouded
from head to toe in black burqas, have raided houses they claim
are being used as brothels in residential neighbourhoods in Islamabad.
These
are all signs of a creeping campaign to Talibanise Pakistan that
is spreading to the capital and some other towns from remote tribal
areas along the Afghan border. Like-minded religious vigilantes
in the North West Frontier Province have asked parents to pull out
their daughters from schools, and have forcibly stopped female schoolteachers
and health visitors from work.
Such
vigilantism is backed by Muslim clerics who have set up a parallel
Islamic judicial system to try those they believe to be involved
in "immoral acts." They have set up a court within the
precincts of Lal Masjid, right in the heart of the nation's capital,
indicating a complete paralysis of the state. Their actions are
reminiscent of the rise of the Taliban, whose law-and-order campaign
was a path to gaining power in Afghanistan.
As
part of their campaign, Lal Masjid clerics last month issued a fatwa,
calling for the sacking and trial of Tourism Minister Nilofer Bakhtiar,
who was photographed hugging her instructor after completing a parachute
jump in France. The clerics deemed it "un-Islamic behaviour."
"Now I fear for my life," Ms Bakhtiar told a Senate Standing
Committee.
While many Pakistani political analysts agree that the growing influence
of radical Islam presents an increasingly serious threat to Pakistan's
internal political stability and to regional security, Musharraf's
government has done little to stop it. Critics accuse the military
of allowing the radical mullahs to act with impunity to protect
the continuation of the general's rule by pandering to the fundamentalists.
Few believe that the government is helpless or incapacitated against
the religious extremists. In fact, the government's shameful capitulation
has encouraged zealots in other parts of the country to emulate
the trend set by radical clerics of Lal Masjid and the burqa brigade
of Madrassah Hafsa. The government defends its policy of inaction
by saying it wants to avoid furthur opposition from conservative
Muslims and violent reprisals from militants.
While
the government pursues a policy of appeasement, the militants have
stepped up their terrorist activities, targeting top government
officials and the army more frequently than before. The latest suicide
bombing aimed at federal Interior Minister Aftab Sherpao during
a rally in Charsadda that killed more than two dozen people is a
chilling reminder of Pakistan itself having turned into a theatre
of war spilling over from Afghanistan. The multi-dimensional crises
threatens to fragment the nation along political, religious and
ethnic lines. This also raises serious questions about President
Musharraf's own survival in power.
General
Musharraf has announced his intention of seeking election for another
term, but there is no indication of his doffing the uniform. This
makes the situation more serious, raising fears of further political
instability. Defence analysts maintain that the army will be watching
the situation with concern as public outrage turns against their
own institution.
In
an attempt to find an expedient way to dampen the protests, broaden
his increasingly narrow political base and reassure his re-election
for another five years, Musharraf is desperately seeking new allies
among the mainstream political parties. He has apparently decided
to strike a deal with bitter political rival Benazir Bhutto's Pakistan
People's Party. Some of Musharraf's close aides believe the compromise
could provide the best hope for him.
But can the emerging partnership with Bhutto save him?
Bhutto's recent statements saying she was willing to work with Musharraf
in the "national interest" lend further credence to the
reports about an impending rapprochement. Over the past few months,
Musharraf has telephoned Bhutto at least three times, and the president's
most senior aide, Tariq Aziz, has been holding negotiations with
her in Dubai. In a show of good faith, the government is already
starting to take confidence-building measures. Last month they closed
down the NAB cell investigating corruption charges against Bhutto,
her husband, Asif Ali Zardari, and some other politicians. The transfer
of vice chairman NAB, Wasim Afzal, is also the result of the ongoing
negotiations between the two sides. Bhutto's refusal to join a grand
opposition alliance, which was to have included the MMA, and the
PPP's support for the government's Women Protection Bill were believed
to be the part of the CBMS. Musharraf called to thank Bhutto after
the passage of the Bill, which many of his own allies in the PML
(Q) had grudgingly voted for.
For
Musharraf, a compromise with one of the most powerful mainstream
political parties has become critical, as he faces growing public
discontent and street protests on his ill-conceived suspension of
the chief justice on incredibly flimsy charges. Most legal experts
agree that the President would find it extremely difficult to extricate
himself from the self-created predicament and ride out the current
political storm. A deal with the PPP would not only help him divide
the opposition, but also ensure his election for another five-year
term.
On
the other hand, the deal would allow Benazir Bhutto to return to
Pakistan to campaign for her party in the parliamentary elections
due to be held by the end of this year. The corruption charges against
Bhutto and her husband, Zardari, will either be dropped or simply
not pursued. The agreement may lead to relatively free and fair
elections, paving the way for the PPP to emerge as a major contender
for power in the centre, as well as in Sindh and the Punjab. But
there is also a downside to the PPP's rapprochement with Musharraf.
Many political observers believe that the party may loose its credibility
by joining a military-led dispensation.
Musharraf
and Bhutto, until now, appeared to be the most unlikely political
partners. The general had often accused Bhutto of having plundered
the country during her two terms as prime minister in the 1990s
and vowed not let her return. Bhutto, on the other hand, derided
him for being a usurper who had allowed Islamic extremists huge
political space. But the politics of expediency may now bring the
two adversaries together.
A
major point of contention is whether Musharraf would continue to
hold the dual posts of president and chief of army staff. According
to some sources, Musharraf may agree to take off the uniform after
the elections. Such a deal may be mutually beneficial to both Musharraf
and Bhutto, but it may not necessarily lead to the restoration of
full democracy in the country. There is no indication that the military's
role in the country's politics would in any way be curtailed. The
only way out of the crisis is for Musharraf to hold free and fair
elections and leave it to the electorate to decide the future course
of the country.
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