It's
a contradiction in terms. General Musharraf saysthat
he's in the third phase of his transition to democracy.
But his declaration of a state of emergency, holding
the constitution in abeyance and ordering amendments
to the PEMRA Ordinance, 2002, and the Press, Newspapers,
News Agencies and Books Registration Ordinance, 2002,
strike at two of the fundamental pillars of democracy:
the judiciary and the media.
The
move comes as a major disappointment, but not a surprise.
Clipping the wings of the judiciary was a foregone conclusion.
The president's election was on
the chopping block, as was the National Reconciliation
Ordinance 2007 that granted amnesty to allegedly errant
politicians. An executive that has, as a general practice,
been given carte blanche to do whatever it wills, including
mess around with the constitution under the doctrine
of necessity, was beginning to feel the heat as a highly
charged judiciary was starting to assert itself, asking
awkward questions and demanding to know the answers,
and additionally taking errant officials to task. Now
the honourable judges have been shown the door for being
unnecessarily "meddlesome" in the affairs
of the state.
The
media, too, has been silenced, for doing essentially
what was their job - reporting the truth, that is. Truth
hurts the image of the country - this is the general's
recurring refrain. So the media has been ordered not
to air or to print anything that
brings the top functionaries of the state into disrepute
(even if it be the truth?), not to print images of bomb
blast victims (even if there are 150 of them?), and
not publish any interviews and photographs of terrorists
(even if they run amok in the country, brandishing their
swords and Kalashnikovs?) - in short, anything that
is "negative" by government standards. What
the government is, in effect, saying is see no evil,
hear no evil - and the evil will go away.
Would
the government rather have images of lawyers and journalists
being beaten up and apprehended for protesting the violation
of their fundamental rights under the Provisional Constitutional
Order? For those are the images newspapers are flashing.
Meanwhile, in an unprecedented move, all independent
TV news channels, including foreign networks, have been
banished from the airwaves. In the age of globalisation,
of Internet, blogs and emails, it seems absurd to black
out news. For eventually, the truth will out.
Why is the media being held culpable and punished for
the government's own sins of omission and commission?
The terrorists in Swat and elsewhere in the country
are not a figment of the media's imagination. Neitheris
the media responsible for their proliferation. By now,
the entire world is familiar with the origins of these
terrorist groups and their base of operation. As is
the general. Blocking out the news or blocking access
to TV channels is not going to make the militants go away. Only a consistent and cogent policy
will - and the political will to follow it through.Lathi-charging,
tear-gassing and apprehending lawyers, media personnel
and members of civil society is not the way of progressive
liberals, especially those who profess to introduce
real democracy in the country. Itis the style of despots,
who are in for the long haul.
For
the moment, Pakistan does not appear to be in any stage
of transition to democracy. Despotism seems tobe the
order of the day.