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Military Courts...a Defence.

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Military courts: a defence
Mosharraf Zaidi
Saturday, December 27, 2014
The writer is an analyst and commentator.

On the one hand, we should all get behind the Pakistan Army and the entire political class because they are now seemingly united to fight the long overdue war against monsters that the army and these politicians themselves once created.

On the other hand, we should be very worried about due process, about our democracy, and perhaps most of all about yet another generation of army majors rising to the rank of army brigadiers with a sense of ingrained moral superiority over our judges, policemen and MPAs.

How does a conscientious Pakistani reconcile these two disparate instincts? Most of us place a premium on black and white clarity. There is nothing Bush about this. It is human nature. We want to be on the side that we believe is right, and true.

The army is made up of roughly six hundred thousand of our sons and brothers. Putting on the uniform is an incredible act of sacrifice and courage, especially in Pakistan. This is, let’s remember, an army that has been at war for over a decade – on its own territory, against its own citizens, in multiple theatres, and under the swirling clouds of complex international political economy, and assassinations, protests, elections and electricity blackouts at home. Worst, all of this is seen through the lens of the actions of Field Marshal Ayub Khan, General Ziaul Haq and General Pervez Musharraf. The army can never live down its role in our republic’s various dysfunctions. The sins of generals past, weighing down on our heroic men in arms today is fundamentally unfair.

Yet this much is also true. The military has mothered a pathological hatred for Pakistani democracy, a process that goes back to before Ayub, and continued through the daily grind of the containerised ‘revolution’ we had to endure over the last four months. It turns out the devil knows how to work more than one human frailty. The clowns in our discourse that the army can’t outright buy, it seduces with vanity (everyone else is a foreign agent). Does the veneer of distance, because General Pasha is no longer in service, absolve the culture of the Pakistani military of its hatred for politicians and democrats? It absolutely does not.

Perhaps worse, every generation of corps commanders and chiefs from after the Zia era have failed to challenge violent religious extremism as a legitimate marker of Pakistani identity. Some have endured this silently, and others have endorsed it enthusiastically. Anti-west, pan-Islamist gobbledygook is not the fringe rhetoric in our society. It is mainstream. Pakistani generals who have watched our brave sons bleed to death from the wounds of our ‘strategic depth’ must today tiptoe around this Al-Qaedaised narrative of Pakistani statehood. And make no mistake, the Al-Qaeda narrative is the Hizb ut Tahrir narrative is the TTP narrative is the Lashkar-e-Jhangvi narrative is the Abdul Aziz narrative is the pan-Islamist violent extremist narrative. It is one painting, on one canvas.

What unwitting captives of this narrative don’t understand is that a rejection of democracy is a rejection of Pakistan and Pakistani statehood. The evidence is in what this anti-state narrative has generated as outcomes. The people that made, defended and financed Pakistan in infancy, would, if alive today, constitute a bunch of ‘wajibul qatl infidels’. Can you imagine the Quaid, Sir Aga Khan, or Zafarullah Khan appealing to our good senses? Can any right-winger in this country get away with defending those three men as good Pakistani Muslims in the Pakistan of 2014? You know the answer to that.

The otherisation of our very identity as a refuge for minorities took four decades. This process was incubated, and nursed by our military and intelligence services, with the support of a parade of ‘democrats’ that include senior members of every single mainstream party in the country. Every single one.

And then there was Peshawar. Which happened after the Marriott bombing (which was in the year 2008 AD, or roughly over two thousand days ago). After the Marriott was bombed, there was the GHQ attack. That was in 2009, or over 1,800 days ago. The GHQ attack was not the only one on our military. Serving generals have been assassinated, army families have been slaughtered whilst praying Juma at Parade Lane in Pindi, and at PNS Mehran they took out half our fleet of P3C Orions.

Today, many patriotic Pakistanis have an urge to ignore history and swallow the entire edifice of new military courts, and the faux subservience of the military to our political leadership, sideways. This is a baton too large, even for the most optimistic and gullible of us.

The truth is that the case for military courts rests on one simple, but powerful fact. Army majors and colonels are not as vulnerable to terrorist intimidation as our district and sessions judges, or our high court judges, or our Supreme Court judges. That fact, and that fact alone, is both the most legitimate reason to accept military courts, and the starkest commentary on what we have allowed our society and state to become. This is a moral dilemma that Pakistanis have to assess with great sobriety.

One the one hand we should unapologetically stand in support of the army at a time of national crisis. Pakistan needs a strong and effective military, and an even stronger and more effective intelligence community.

On the other, we have collectively, army families included, suffered unspeakably, because Pakistani society has failed to hold its generals accountable for their behavior. This is true during martial law, as much as it is during democratic rule. It is true of the strategic blunders we’ve committed, as much as it is true of corruption and rent-seeking we have allowed. Criticising the existence of Defence Housing Authorities may seem like a trivial exercise, but it is an act of patriotism. It is a challenge to unchecked moral authority. No republic can survive the unchecked moral authority of any individual or institution. Putting on the uniform is an act of heroism, but even heroes cannot be exempt from accountability.

So while I support the military courts on the basis of an internalised doctrine of necessity, I think it would be criminal for us to not ask serious questions about military courts today, and every day until they are established, and twice a day, until they are eventually disbanded.

Would it have been preferable for our prime minister to announce constitutional amendments for legal and judicial reform that could have enabled civilian judges to do what the military courts are now going to be asked to do? Of course.

The majors and colonels that will now be sentencing terrorists do indeed have a different hardware and software to our judges. It isn’t necessarily better. But when terrorists menacingly taunt the Pakistani republic with an invitation to ‘go to hell’, military officers are better equipped to respond by saying, ‘You first’. There isn’t a constitutional amendment app for that. Yet.

The big test of how useful this all will be for Pakistan is whether the convictions are indiscriminate across all terrorists, or whether they are restricted to terrorists that have fallen fowl of our broken, low-grade, low-IQ, strategic thinking. For now, we will have to trust General Raheel Sharif and the army high command. Because, let’s face it, what other choice do we have?

But the long-term reality is stark, ugly and begs reflection. We face the problems we have today because we allowed our soldiers to become social engineers. We allowed our social engineers to take over our mosques, and our television talk shows. Then we threw away the keys. It is no small irony that to get them back, we need our soldiers.

www.mosharrafzaidi.com
 
If writer is implying that FGCM is headed by Major and Colonel rank officers then he doesn't know much about military courts. Even a trivial offence like Awol is tried by Colonel and then endorsed by a brigadier.

Serious offences like terorrist attacks are tried by FGCM headed by Major General assisted by one or two Brigadiers. He does not know much about the process, does he now?
 
Military courts: a defence
Mosharraf Zaidi
Saturday, December 27, 2014

"One the one hand we should unapologetically stand in support of the army at a time of national crisis. Pakistan needs a strong and effective military, and an even stronger and more effective intelligence community."

I standby Pakistan Army and say yes to Military Courts: Yes but as a First option. I have an opinion that there is a second option for getting the same results through military personals.

* Constitute Special Courts under the Protection of Pakistan Ordinance, 2013.
* No serving Sessions Judge shall be appointed as presiding officer of Special Courts. Appoint judges among the
selected panel of practicing lawyers through a committee supervised by a Serving General.
* Appoint a Registrar of Special Court a Serving brigadier who shall control the affairs of Special Court for
seeking assistance from other civilian agencies and judiciary.
* Appoint a Prosecutor General for Special Courts a Serving Brigadier who shall decide that which case should go
to special court. Appoint Additional Prosecutors Generals from among Colonels Majors and Captains. These
fellows shall control the prosecution agency and shall be responsible for producing evidence before the judge of
Special Courts.
* Produce classified and secret evidence before the judge in chamber with out any disclosure to the accused
and his counsel and this evidence shall not be a part of judgment announced by the Special Court.
* No. of witnesses in the charge sheet should be marginal such as 4/5 witnesses only. Do not name or produce
the formal witnesses in Court.
* Charge sheet should be submitted in seven days.
* Trial upto the stage of judgment should be completed within seven days.
* The Judge of Special Court under PPO 2013 shall be empowered to take action also under the
Anti-Terrorism Court Act, 1997. The proscribed organizations, their bank accounts, and accounts of facilitators
abettors and handlers may be frozen and proscribed organization may be put on watch lists.
* Under PPO 2013 the appeal shall lie to Supreme Court where a special Bench may be constituted.

Note: In USA The Military Commissions Act were promulgated in the years 2001-2006-2009. The sentences passed by courts against Al-Qaida peoples were set aside by the Federal Supreme Court and all the non-citizens combatant terrorist were set free.
In the prevailing situation in Pakistan the Military had under taken a tough Job. If Military Courts are established
there shall be a hue & cry in the later months and all efforts and successes and soldiers losses shall be undermined.

SMIQBAL, ADVOCATE.
ssssmiqbal@gmail.com
 
The only alternative to military courts at the moment is tho have judges sit in GHQ under armed guard and anonymously give verdicts.

The military courts aren't challenging the Supreme Court, nor are they going up against civilian courts. They are only 'facilitating' the civilian courts in terrorism cases.

I don't see much wrong in that, and see no danger to democracy and whatnot.
 
Well looking at our current judicial system, we have no other option but to go for Military courts. It is a though decision but we have no other choice left either.
 
I do consider it a realistic approach. As courts are courts no matter civil or military. And, most of all it is much better to trial criminals rather than leaving them loose. God forbid, if these courts failed to do "speedy justice" then that would really undermine their purpose. Given our main judicial system has already failed and is "not fit for the purpose".
 
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Definitely, we need to punish the culprits in the most serious and toughest way possible so that we can set such examples that our worst enemy India is forced to call her proxy war against our beloved motherland off, leave Afghanistan and run back to her rat holes.

I am a practicing lawyer in England so, knowing very well a criminal's psychology, I consider the establishment of "speedy/military courts" as a perfect and the most appropriate step taken by the leadership of our armed forces. As such I proudly admire Gen Raheel Sharif and Lt Gen Rizwan Akhtar for displaying their commitment to eliminate the cancer of terrorism from Pakistan.

Because it's never too late to mend. In fact these courts would be able to fast track trials of the culprits and send a clear & loud MESSAGE to these coward and shortsighted puppets/khawarjese that "we will not tolerate and allow any individual or network to fight India's proxy war against Pakistan anymore".

LONG LIVE PAKISTAN - You can find and follow me on twitter Malik M Javed Aslam.
 
Its our problem.

The army will ensure its gets the constitutional cover come what may. It has also decided to upgrade its JAG branch to ensure that there is no blowback. All military court recommendations will be approved by the highest military authority -CoAS.
 
Its our problem.

The army will ensure its gets the constitutional cover come what may. It has also decided to upgrade its JAG branch to ensure that there is no blowback. All military court recommendations will be approved by the highest military authority -CoAS.

At a personal level I feel that such decisive , fast track courts are necessary assuming that Pak is serious in meting out justice.

At a macro level it sets a dangerous precedent. Some questions that get thrown up :

How long will such courts remain ?

What stops them from spreading their domain, if the law of the land can be bent to establish them, whats stops them to perpetuate themselves ?

Are there any time lines ?

How transparent will such courts be ?

Military courts normally have one Legally qualified man, the rest including the President/ head of the court are regular officers.

Can the JAG branch be ' upgraded' at such short notice ? How ' upgraded' with the upgrade be ?

If the COAS is the final arbitrator then does it not amount to outsourcing the law of the land to him / army ? How much legal experience does a combat soldier who is a COAS have ? He too will go either by the recommendations made to him or by his gut reaction / emotions.

Your views please.
 
Military courts are needed as they are in the best interest of Pakistan today. Gen. Raheel knows & we know that corrupt & incompetent politicians & corrupt & incompetent civil courts are complete failures & they cannot be trusted no what.

Military courts will have to punish the corrupt & sold out fake mullah terrorists to death, there is no doubt that friends & protector of politicians in the form of NGO', lawyers, judges & politicians will attack military & military courts like mad dogs, if PA successfully punishes sold out & fake mullahs to death this will shut many mouths & strike fear in the hearts of rented terrorists protectors, PA will have to be hard & stand their ground, PA will have to act for Pakistan. If in future PA takes over, they will will surely get heavy support from the people of Pakistan.
 
the whole post with random points added to increase the size can be reduced to 'armymen cant be scared of punishing terrorists for the fear of reprisal.. (compared to civil judges)'.
The question is, can they deliver justice. Against the people they are fighting.
Also can one appeal against the judgement in SC.
 
There are pros and cons on the subject of military courts which is quite clear. To rid the militancy and jihadi elements requires "quick justice" to send a clear message to any "jihadi wannabe's". This initiative has been long, long overdue but both our democrats as well as military leaders wanted to showcase our democratic credentials to the world at theexpense of 5,000 soldiers and 50,000 civilian casualties. The tipping point was the APS attack. Many human rights org's as well as EU and UN have raised the issue of "human rights" of the terrorists but no one talks or speaks about the rights of the 55,000 pakistanis who have lost their lives only because they were at the wrong place at the right time. These so-called human beings dont deserve any thing else but the hang-man's noose. Of the 7 hanged terrorists, it is reported that one cried like a baby for forgiveness and one pissed in his shalwar - good riddance. These are extra-ordinary times which require extra-ordinary measures.
 
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When we are not in Europe , Nor we have European law or parliament or courts so ... why are we listening to Europe

With all due respect we are at war
 

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