Last
month, on one of his many trips around the world, General
Musharraf, in an interview with the Dubai-based Al Arabiya
TV channel, offered to mediate on the Palestine issue.
Impressive,
except that back home there are several pressing issues
that demand his immediate and undivided attention. And
it would help if General Musharraf were to cut down
on his foreign engagements and stay put
at home to get a feel of the situation on the ground.
The
political temperature of the country is hotting up.
The lawyers refuse to say die, and their pro-Justice
Chaudhry campaign is fast developing into a Go
Musharraf, go movement, as it draws more supporters
to its fold.
And
thats just one of the generals manifold
irritants. The Jamia Hafsa burqas and beards continue
to pose a major threat to his agenda of enlightened
moderation.
Emboldened by the governments hands-off policy,
other mullahs are following suit and drumming up support
for the extremist tune. In Swat, the maulana who persuaded
4,000 parents to refrain from getting their children
vaccinated under a government-sponsored polio vaccination
scheme is now forcing lady health visitors out of the
workforce by threatening them with dire consequences.
Rather
than confront these reactionaries who are posing a challenge
to the writ of the state, all the government has done
is sent mullahs within its ranks, like Chaudhary Shujaat
and Ejazul Haq, to negotiate with them. On the other
hand, it has continued to wield the whip on lawyers
and the media, which has, of late, become its
favourite punching bag. In a blatant show of muscle,
PEMRA slapped Aaj TV with a show-cause notice, threatening
cancellation of its broadcast license, for straying
out of line on the judiciary issue.
The
government can attempt to zip some lips, but other lips
will continue to tell and theres nothing
PEMRA can do about it.
Take
the cross-border terrorism issue, for instance. First
India, then Afghanistan, and now Iran are accusing Pakistan
of fomenting trouble within their respective countries
by harbouring and sending terrorists across the border.
For far too long, weve continued to rubbish these
allegations and turned a blind eye to the human bombs
being bred in our own backyard, which are now threatening
to destroy the fabric of the nation as they turn their
sights inwards. A sitting president, a sitting prime
minister, a sitting interior minister and a corps commander
have all been targeted, causing colossal collateral
damage.
And
if the general is still hesitant to sever his umbilical
cord with the patron saints of these extremists
the religious parties on the advice of
his intelligence agencies, who have always used them
as the second line of defence, then he is refusing to
see the light. Unless he fears that his purported deal
with Ms Bhutto could become unstuck and he may have
to call upon his B-team to put him in the driving seat.
But at what cost?
The
society is fragmented, fanaticism has reared its ugly
head, lawlessness is rampant and the masses are beginning
to lose their patience with the current dispensation
and its half-baked strategies.
Time is
running out for General Musharraf. He has to seize the
moment and listen to the calls for a free and fair election,
which allows the people to vote for the leaders of their
choice.
A uniform should not be allowed to stand in the way.