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Political Dimensions of Police Reform in Pakistan - foreign terror policy intact?

RajeHind

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A recent report of CARNEGIE ENDOWMENT FOR INTERNATIONAL PEACE a US NGO, which shows a friction between Pakistani military and police also shows that Pakistani military is only concerned about domestic terrorism and want to abolish it with foreign assistance while it keep on supporting foreign terrorism carried out by Pakistan’s proxies and it also ensures that its proxies can not be touched by the regime.

Link :- http://carnegieendowment.org/files/pakistan_police.pdf


Political Dimensions of Police
Reform in Pakistan



Few reforms would make more of an impact on Pakistan’s security and political
situation than reforming the civilian security forces, particularly the police. Only
a strong police force can prevent the expansion of radicalism by tackling the
problem at the grassroots level. Only a strong police force, working with local
administration and the judiciary, can provide long-term security.
Strong and efficient security forces are also the only way to diminish the civilian
government’s dependence on the army to ensure domestic security. They can
help restore confidence in the government and its ability to protect people.
Increasing the capacity of the police will lead to greater efficiency in security
management and, as a result, increase the legitimacy of the regime. These goals
have been the cornerstone of assistance programs to Pakistan’s police service,
including the hundreds of millions of dollars in U.S. assistance to be spent
annually on police reform contained in the much-talked-about Kerry-Lugar-
Berman law.
The link between security and legitimacy is obvious in most countries, including
in dictatorial regimes where the need to re-establish security is often the pretext
for taking power. However, the causality between security and legitimacy is
somewhat distorted in the case of Pakistan.
In most authoritarian regimes, violence is used for the repression of political
dissent. But no matter how ruthless, the primary aim is always the reaffirmation
of the monopoly of the state on legitimate violence. In Pakistan, the state itself,
or more precisely its most important actor, the military, uses violence in a quite
different manner. It pushes one part of the population against another, one
organization against the other―each time creating a new problem for which
military power appears to be the ultimate recourse.
So far, the problem is viewed essentially as a technical issue. While the Kerry-
Lugar-Berman law contains conditions linked to democratic norms and respect
for Pakistan’s constitution, these considerations are always competing with
short-term ones linked to the needs of the Pakistani army in the fight against
terrorism.
This is, however, a false dilemma. Capacity building and the political will to fight
terrorism cannot be separated. Should political will or real determination to fight
terrorism be missing, capacity building will inevitably end in failure, regardless of
the amount of foreign assistance invested.
The commitment by the military and intelligence agencies to increase police
capacity is the result of outside influence and special circumstances. The default
position of the military is not to invest in increasing the capabilities and authority
of the police, as the military wants to be seen as the sole provider of security to
the population. Any effort aimed at building police capabilities is thus likely to be
met with suspicion and hostility.
Strengthening police capabilities is not just a matter of technical assistance and
will succeed only if it is understood as part of a larger political process. The
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effort, no matter how costly, will be meaningful only if accompanied by
legislative and regulatory guarantees that the money will be spent, and the people
used for the purpose and in the way they were intended. This will most likely
require a stricter application of the conditions contained in the Kerry-Lugar-
Berman law.


Pakistan’s Police and the Military Intelligence
Agencies



Any assessment of Pakistani law enforcement agencies must take into account
the role of the intelligence agencies. The intelligence agencies often work as the
unofficial arm of the military, both in domestic and foreign affairs. The police
force, too, was historically an instrument of political repression for both civilian
and military regimes. The role of the intelligence agencies would not be a
problem if they didn’t use terror tactics against Pakistan’s opponents.
Pakistani police officials have long complained that the resources to build
investigative capacities have gone to the intelligence agencies at the expense of
the police. That trend was reinforced under General Pervez Musharraf, who
strengthened the Directorate for Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) in the aftermath of
attempts on his life.
In its dealings with the various actors in Pakistan’s political scene, the intelligence
agencies vacillate between playing the police and detaining terrorists and keeping
the police from taking action against terrorists. Police officers often assert in
private that they are asked by military intelligence agencies to release militants or
criminals from custody. Such actions have contributed to widespread distrust of
these institutions and continue to feed a political culture that thrives on
conspiracy theories.

The Report of the United Nations Commission of Inquiry into the facts and circumstances of
the assassination of Former Pakistani Prime Minister Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto is a must
read for anyone concerned with police reform in Pakistan. Although it is
inconclusive about who actually killed the former prime minister, the report
contains important insights with regard to the inner workings of Pakistani law
enforcement.
The report offers perhaps the most striking documented example of intelligence
agency interference in police work. In the case of the Bhutto investigation, the
role of the intelligence agencies far exceeded assistance in investigations, and had
the effect of subordinating law enforcement institutions. “Whatever little
direction the police investigators had was provided to them by the intelligence
agencies,” says the Commission, which clearly states that they, “including the
Inter Service Intelligence (ISI), were present during key points in the police
investigation, including the gathering of evidence at the crime scene and the
forensic examination of Mrs. Bhutto’s vehicle, playing a role that the police were
reluctant to reveal to the Commission.” The ISI was conducting its own
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investigation at the same time but only selectively shared the evidence it collected
with the police. The intelligence agencies hampered the investigation all along,
impeding the search for truth.
The asymmetry of power between the army and its intelligence agencies on the
one side, and the police on the other, deeply affects the latter’s behavior. In
many instances the police have refused to confront organizations that they knew
to have a privileged relationship with the intelligence agencies. Lashkar-e-Taiba, a
terrorist group operating out of Pakistan, is one such organization.
Tension between the police and intelligence agencies clearly influenced the
investigation of Benazir Bhutto’s murder. The UN Commission believes that the
failures of the police “were driven by uncertainty in the minds of many officials
as to the extent of the involvement of [the] intelligence agencies. These officials
in part fearing involvement by the intelligence agencies, were unsure of how
vigorously they ought to pursue actions that they knew, as professionals, they
should have taken.”
The intelligence agencies’ interference does not exclude specific police
responsibility for the dysfunctions of police institutions, as recently observed
following terrorist attacks in Lahore. This poor performance of the police
allowed the intelligence agencies to accuse them of inefficiency in dealing with
extremism. For example, the ISI today blames the police for its management of
the July 2007 Red Mosque incident in Islamabad, while at the same time claiming
that it did not ignore what was going on within the Mosque located about 500
meters from its headquarters. Such was also the case in the scandal that followed
the release of the UN report of the Commission of Inquiry. Eight police officials
were suspended. Not a single military or agency official was blamed, although the
report clearly confirms their responsibility for the failure of the investigation.
In reality, the police can only conduct efficient operations when there is at least a
minimal consensus within the security establishment. Shoaib Suddle, former
head of the Intelligence Bureau (IB), was able to successfully confront the
Muttahida Qwami Movement (MQM) in the mid-1990s because the ISI, under
the leadership of Lt. General Asad Durrani, was also trying to weaken the MQM
at the beginning of the decade.
The police-intelligence problem is exacerbated by an asymmetry that allows
military officials, serving and retired, to lead the police and civilian intelligence
agencies. Brigadier Ijaz Shah led the Intelligence Bureau under Musharraf’s
presidency and, as such, was in a position to influence the orientation of the
organization. By contrast, there is no civilian in a leadership position in the ISI,
although the institution does employ civilians.
The practice of placing military officers at the higher echelons of law
enforcement institutions seems to have diminished since the February 2008
elections. It has, however, been more than compensated by the de facto
militarization of the police at the lower ranks. The 5,000 police officers trained in
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counterterrorism in the North-West Frontier Province (NWFP) are all said to be
former military.
The military and their intelligence agencies are thus present at all levels of the law
enforcement structures set in place to combat terrorism. Such a role would and
should be considered abnormal outside of Pakistan. Given the intelligence
agencies’ past and present role in supporting terrorism in the country, the
institutionalization of their presence in the law enforcement institutions creates
de facto a conflict of interest.

The Politicization of Pakistan’s Police

The role played by the intelligence agencies does not tell the whole story
however. Politicization and “clientelism” are largely responsible for the current
state of Pakistan’s police. But this politicization reflects the ambivalence and
contradictions of Pakistani society historically, as both civilian and military
regimes have used the police as an instrument of repression against the
opposition.
In addition to being used to further the political objectives of various groups, the
police itself gradually became politicized. In a report published in 2001, former
inspector general of police Muhammad Shoaib Suddle complained about the
“arbitrary and whimsical (mis)management of police by the executive authority
of the state at every level—policemen were increasingly recruited, trained,
promoted and posted without regard to merit and mainly for their subservience
to people with influence and power.”
This trend was particularly pronounced in the 1990s. Muhammad Shoaib Suddle
insists that “the last decade of the 20th century particularly witnessed an almost
complete collapse of the existing law and order apparatus thanks mainly to
growing and reckless interference in vital aspects of police administration by the
‘persons of influence.’” Nominations were decided on the basis of political
affiliations (initially with the PML-N and the PPP, then later with the MQM in
Sindh and the NPA in NWFP). As a result, police standards kept declining while
public mistrust for the police kept increasing.

Musharraf and Police Reform

As a consequence of the politicization of the police, many in and outside of the
institution welcomed the Police Order introduced by Musharraf, believing it
would transform the police into an effective protective body for Pakistani
citizens.
The Police Act of 2002 formally placed the police under oversight bodies
composed of both elected and nominated members at the district, provincial,
and national levels, while an additional check was placed on the police through
the creation of an independent prosecution service. Citizen liaison committees
were also established to facilitate contacts with the wider public. Safety
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commissions and offices of police complaints were meant to ensure public
accountability. Autonomy in administration and investigation was also supposed
to guarantee operational neutrality. The police itself was reorganized along
functional lines into various branches and divisions (ranging from investigation,
intelligence, watch and ward, and guard duties) to improve efficiency. The
posting of officers to the specialized branches was to proceed according to
qualification and experience.1
An exhaustive analysis of the system Musharraf intended to set up would go
beyond the focus of this paper, as it would have to examine the consequences of
the devolution process for the police. Devolution created, in effect, a new client
for the federal government at the local level. It shifted public oversight of the
police from the deputy commissioner (the authority controlling a district’s
executive, judicial, and revenue functions) to the mayors (nazims), but did not
make the police more effective or more autonomous.
However, under pressure from his political allies, who feared they would lose
control over the police, Musharraf introduced a series of amendments in the
Police Act in 2004, which undermined the spirit of the reform. The role of the
oversight bodies was drastically reduced and political interference reintroduced.
Appointments, transfers, and evaluations no longer needed to be approved by
the oversight bodies and therefore ultimately depended on the politicians at
almost all levels. In order to secure their career prospects, police officers had no
choice but to do the bidding of their political masters.
The Musharraf era illustrated the many contradictions in Pakistani society.
Musharraf took power as a reaction against corrupt politicians endangering the
future of the country but gave in to the pressures of the same political clique (the
PML-Q was mostly composed of former PML-N members who had rallied
around Musharraf after the coup) on a reform that, if successful, would have
brought him real popular support.
It is also unclear whether Musharraf ever intended to make the police a truly
autonomous and efficient body. He officially wanted to improve the police force
but deprived it of adequate resources, increasing instead the capabilities of the
intelligence agencies. Many in Pakistan’s police believe today he did more harm
than good.
Today the fate of police officers remains linked to the interests and goodwill of
politicians. When Shabaz Sharif lost his position as chief minister of Punjab in
February 2009, all of the high ranking civil servants from the provincial police
force were relieved of their duties. They were reintegrated when Shabaz was
reinstated as chief minister.
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Capacity Building and Political Will:
A Chicken and Egg Problem?


The above arguments do not mean that building capacity is not worth
considering, simply that its absence so far is the result of a deliberate policy.
The National Highways and Motorways Police force is sometimes presented as a
success story that could and should be replicated in other branches. Top-level
commitment, effective leadership, better wages, a favorable work environment,
and an emphasis on equality before the law are some of the characteristics of this
department.2 However, this specific specialization is devoid of any political
content. As a result, proper funds are allocated and leadership is not an issue.
So far, the Pakistani police force enjoys a degree of autonomy only when its
leadership pursues good relations with the military―namely, when the police
leadership tolerates or endorses domestic military objectives. As a matter of fact,
the leaders are chosen according to their acceptability to the military. It would be
delusory to believe that any reform of the police will be successful if it is limited
to purely technical aspects (training and equipment).
Police reform in Pakistan must take place within a larger democratic evolution of
the political system. Since 2008, the army itself trains carefully-selected police
officers, which shows the recognition of a need for a competent police force,
despite the persistent mistrust between the army and the police. However, unless
the democratic question is addressed, the process will result in the militarization
of the police, not the strengthening of civilian law and order capabilities.
It would, however, be desirable to condition any assistance to or cooperation
with the Pakistani police on regulatory and legislative changes in order to
guarantee the autonomy of the police.
Pakistan’s government should provide guarantees that the forces constituted as a
result of U.S. and international assistance will be used for the purpose they were
created for and not dispersed to other units.
There is no doubt that accusations of interference will continue to flourish.
These accusations will, however, be unjustified. Relations with Pakistan should
be transactional, even if they are bound to remain asymmetrical. Nor should the
argument that Pakistan is already paying the cost for the Western war against
terrorism be accepted at face value. Pakistan is indeed paying a heavy cost to
fight terrorist groups but it should be remembered that it created or supported
these groups itself.
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Building Capabilities Versus Not Antagonizing
the Military: A Dilemma that Should Not Be



The Kerry-Lugar-Berman law provides an adequate framework to deal with
balancing capabilities and the military’s influence. It contains a set of
recommendations and, through its system of conditionality, all the required
means of action. It should, however, be applied more strictly. The way in which
it has been used so far by the State Department accepts the logic of a dilemma
between the legal requirements and the need to not antagonize the Pakistani
military because of the war on terror.
Accepting this dilemma amounts to defeating the very purpose of the law itself.
The artificial separation between domestic terrorism—which is recognized as
such by the Pakistani army and therefore must be fought, including with foreign
assistance—and foreign terrorism carried out by Pakistan’s proxies that cannot
be touched by the regime, is a fundamental contradiction that must be addressed.
There is no need here to adopt an “all or nothing” approach. The slowing of aid
disbursement by the United States when the Pakistani administration was
creating problems in delivering visas for U.S. diplomats shows that the system
allows a large degree of flexibility. In fact, all countries should deal with the
Pakistani establishment in this way.
This is in no way a plea against strengthening law enforcement capabilities in
Pakistan—quite the contrary. Many Pakistani police officers benefited from
international training in the past and participate in United Nations operations.
There is a real know-how and a willingness to reform the institution within the
police itself; similarly, many police officers resent their dependence on an army
that tends to monopolize resources and impedes their room to maneuver.
These people need to be helped to turn the police into an instrument of public
service, not of military repression. Police reform should not be allowed to serve
as an alibi for the Pakistani intelligence agencies’ selective fight against terrorism.
Only under these conditions will the Pakistani police become an effective
instrument for fighting terrorism and a contributor to security and stability in
Pakistan and beyond. The failed terrorist attack in Times Square has once again
demonstrated that police reform in Pakistan is indeed the need of the moment.
 
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Is this feasible for pakistani military to separate domestic terror and foreign terror, why it think that its proxies will bring any good results?
 
Many people are against diplomatic immunity. They say why ordinary people are punished when committing a crime and diplomats are not punished. Are they better than we are? Every time when some diplomat commits a crime or violates the law, the public debate over diplomatic immunity arises.If a person with immunity commits a crime in some host country, this country advises his/her government of the committed crime and may request a waiver of the alleged offender's immunity so that person could be judged by court of the host country. But if the immunity is not waived, the host country may order the withdrawal of the offender from the country. If the member of diplomat's family have committed a crime, then entire family may be expelled.The most common abuse of local laws by diplomats are parking violations and driving under the influence of alcohol. If the crime is committed, the sender country should waive the diplomatic immunity from the person who committed that crime and he or she should be sent under the court of host country where the crime was committed. But unfortunately seems that some countries have lack of morality. For example United States of America. When crime is committed there, always public debate arises over diplomatic immunity. But their own diplomats along EUROPEAN diplomats even their personal staff are violating other countries laws as well. If all countries would waive the diplomatic immunity from the criminals the situations would be different.You cant break the american laws inside america even if you are diplomat you have no immunity impunity but extreme discrimination in other cases there should be no diplomatic immunity for any country diplomats in Pakistan and they should be punished more severe rigorously rather then the citizens of host country because these foreign diplomats in long Mercedes- BMW -land cruisers every where specially in capital city of Pakistan even with fake number plates playing games making fun of Pakistani citizens even abuse and harassed them on roads as they feel no fear due to superiority complex of diplomatic immunity impunity as they knew no law enforcing agency can even touch them come near to them extreme shameful for Pakistani top leaders and establishment and parliament who make laws these public wealth looters precious tax wasters transferring their money to foreign accounts because they themselves enjoy in their castles with full security protocol while leave their innocent citizens to be harassed abused and even killed by these foreign out of control un controlled animals with superiority complex this fashion must be controlled else they will freely commit crimes and will produce more Raymond Davis type people who killed 4 people and escaped safely.
 

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