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The
issue of General Musharraf's re-election as president touches on
the first principle of democracy, namely, governance by elected
representatives of the people. Special emphasis is placed in all
constitutional democracies on keeping the line of elected representatives
separate and distinct from the line of paid state employees that
are granted a more dignified status as 'holders of offices of profit
under the state.' The line of elected representatives, which includes
members of legislatures, is headed by two figures, head of state
and head of government in a parliamentary form of government, and
by a single figure, head of both state and government in a presidential
set-up.
Thus,
a bar to state employees holding an elective office has been a feature
of all constitutional frameworks in South Asia, with which we in
Pakistan are concerned, as practices and precedents of other parts
of the world do not apply to situations in Pakistan. All members
of parliament have been under this bar, and in the case of heads
of state, the prohibitory provision has generally been mentioned
twice.
The
practice began with the Government of India Act, 1935, which laid
down (Article 26): "A person shall be disqualified for being
chosen as, and for being, a member of either chamber - (a) if he
holds any office of profit under the Crown in India, other than
an office declared by Act of the Federal Legislature not to disqualify
its holder." Since the government of India was headed by the
governor general, appointed under a Crown warrant, it was not considered
necessary to lay down qualifications/disqualifications for that
office.
When the Act of 1935 was used as the basic law of Pakistan after
August 15, 1947, the provision relating to disqualification for
membership of legislature was deleted, presumably to allow the new
state to decide the matter for itself.
The
post-independence constitutions that India and Pakistan adopted
tried to remove all doubts about the principle of protecting the
line of elected representatives against encroachment by state employees.
The
language of the 1935 Act was retained by India, which adopted its
post-independence constitution much earlier than Pakistan. The provision
(Article 102) relating to membership of the legislature said: "
A person shall be disqualified for being chosen as, and for being,
a member of either House of Parliament - (a) if he holds any office
of profit under the government of India or the government of any
state, other than an office declared by parliament by law not to
disqualify its holder." Another clause barred anyone "disqualified
by or under any law made by Parliament" from becoming a legislator.
This article explicitly excluded union/state ministers from the
definition of holders of offices of profit.
As
for the president, the Indian constitution laid down that he had
to be "qualified for election as a member of the House of the
People (Lok-sabha)." This provision included a bar to the election
of a holder of office of profit to the office of the president.
However, it was considered necessary to add another prohibitory
clause: "A person shall not be eligible for election if he
holds any office of profit under the government of India or the
government of any state or under any local or other authority subject
to the control of any of the said governments." Again, President/Vice-President,
Union/State minister, Governor/Rajpramukh/Deputy Rajpramukh were
excluded from the definition of holder of office of profit. Further,
it was said that "the President shall not hold any other office
of profit."
Pakistan started by attaching less importance to the matter of disqualification
for being elected as a legislator or as president. Under the 1956
constitution (Article 45), a person was qualified to be elected
to the National Assembly if he was 25 years old and was qualified
to be a voter (that is, not necessarily registered as a voter).
Among the various grounds for disqualification from becoming a legislator,
the first three grounds were unsoundness of mind, insolvency and
holding of "any office of profit in the service of Pakistan."
A
candidate for presidentship (Article 32) had to be qualified for
election as a member of the National Assembly (that is, subject
to the bar to holders of office of profit). Additionally, Article
34 laid down that "the president shall not hold any office
of profit in the service of Pakistan, or any other position carrying
the right to remuneration for the rendering of services, but nothing
in this clause shall prevent him from holding or managing any private
property."
The Ayub constitution
of 1962 retained the bar to holders of offices of profit becoming
members of the National Assembly, and the eligibility test for a
presidential candidate was that he should be qualified to be elected
to the National Assembly.
The constitution of 1973 (Article 63) mentioned five grounds for
disqualification for becoming a member of the National Assembly
(and for election as president): a) unsoundness of mind; b) insolvency;
c) loss of citizenship; d) holding of 'any office of profit in the
service of Pakistan other than an office declared by law not to
disqualify its holder'; and e) disqualification by an Act of Parliament.
In addition, Article 43 laid down that "the president shall
not hold any office of profit in the service of Pakistan."
In 1985, General Zia-ul-Haq drastically amended Article 63 and added
quite a few grounds to disqualify a person for becoming a legislator.
While clause 63 (1)(d) of the original text (quoted above) was retained,
a new clause [63 (1)(k)] was inserted to disqualify a person for
election as an MNA if "he has been in the service of Pakistan
or of any statutory body or any body in which the government has
a controlling share or interest, unless a period of two years has
elapsed since he ceased to be in such service." Thus, Gen Zia
made the ineligibility condition harder. Before him, a candidate
was not required to be in service at the time of nomination; the
Zia amendment made it necessary that a candidate had not been in
service for two years before nomination.
What this review clearly brings out is that the bar to a holder
of office of profit becoming eligible for election as president
has been so consistently affirmed in the country's constitutional
texts as to acquire the sanctity of a ground norm of the constitution.
And yet this condition has been breached by two generals while in
power.
General Zia-ul-Haq sought to legitimise his presidency, secured
through an illegitimate referendum while he was chief of army staff
(COAS) by inserting clause 7 in Article 41 of the constitution that
erased the effect of ineligibility contained in Article 43 (that
the president shall not hold any office of profit). General Musharraf
replaced this clause vide the Legal Framework Order (LFO) in 2002
to cover his election as president through a referendum while holding
the post of COAS. Subsequently, the parliament passed a law (the
president to Hold Another Office Act) in 2004 that allowed General
Musharraf to serve as both president and COAS for a single term.
When the question of General Musharraf's re-election arose, it was
noted that a couple of judicial verdicts seemed to free presidential
candidates from the ineligibility condition contained in Article
63, but they could fall under the prohibitory provision in Article
43.
The Supreme Court is seized of the matter at the time of writing,
and so it will not be fair to offer any comment at this stage. Meanwhile,
General Musharraf has been unofficially declared president-elect
by a thin majority of the electoral college, and that may prove
to be decisive.
An essential fact to bear in mind is that in Pakistan matters are
often decided by extra-constitutional devices and arguments. Illegal
usurpation of power has, more than once, been legitimised vide the
doctrine of necessity, of which the theory of public acquiescence
forms an important part. This theory stipulates that if a people
directly or through intermediaries, surrender to a de facto ruler,
the latter acquires the status of a de jure authority. It will,
therefore, be a safe conclusion that 'intruders' will continue to
function as heads of the Pakistan state unless its institutions
and the people in general can demonstrate that the theory of public
acquiescence does not apply to them.
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