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Elections 2008

BB, Nawaz cannot come into power: Sheikh Rashid
Tuesday, January 23, 2008.



Acknowledging the vote bank of Pakistan Peoples Party Parliamentarians (PPP-P), Sheikh Rashid Ahmed, Federal Minister for Railways however said that both Benazir and Nawaz Sharif can not come into power again.

Talking to reporters after the inauguration ceremony of 6 day Teachers Training Workshop in Pakistan Railway School Lady Griffin, the Federal Minister said that the Charter of Democracy is just a paper, the opposition in fact has no consensus candidate.

The Federal Minister said that if negotiations would be held with PPP-P, it would be held on the conditions of President Musharraf.

Terming the visit of President Musharraf to five Middle East countries significant for the future of the region, Sheikh Rashid Ahmed said that the situation would be entirely changed if situation is worsened further in Afghanistan, Iraq and Iran.

BB, Nawaz cannot come into power: Sheikh Rashid
 
Honestly, with the Chaudhry Bradran visiting the Mullah Abdul Aziz of Lal Masjid fame, I do hope the PPP (Even if it means Zardari, though Fahim is more likely) wins by a large margin, and even if that means that Musharraf decides to resign. The only thing that would be nice is if the restrictions on premiership are maintained, along with the retention of powers of appointment of Judges and Military chiefs in the President, so as to avoid too much power in the hands of the PM.
 
I hope friends from Pakistan vote for MQM or PML-Q.

MQM hopes to make matric mandatory, and the education until then FREE! Great stuff. They have totally revamped the transporation system already. I think they should be given another chance rather than relying on old culprits again who can only fill their pocket.
 
Webby,

Despite the presence of Altaf Hussain, I think the MQM is the best party in Pakistan right now. Their Karachi Nazim has done amazing things. They follow a policy of injecting fresh faces, rather than perpetuating dynastic politics. I hope that they can win Sindh again, if not all over Pakistan, because it would be a shame to see all the good work they have done in Sindh, Karachi specifically, go to waste.

If the PML-Q and MQM can keep a two thirds majority out of the hands of the PPP and allies, we might have some of the reforms and balance of powers Musharraf introduced with the 17th amendment stay. I think a coalition of the PPP and MQM (Amin Fahim as PM) would also be pretty good.
 
Q-League likely to let PPP, PML-N form govt

By Ashraf Mumtaz

LAHORE, Feb 14: Despite PML-Q claims that it is going to win majority seats in the Feb 18 elections, leaders of the party are reported to be discussing a proposal to let the PPP and the PML-N to form government at the centre to see how they co-exist with President Pervez Musharraf.

Party sources said that the PPP and the PML-N would try to outmuscle the president without wasting much time and the latter would use his authority to undermine them.

As a result, a new crisis would emerge soon after the polls in which the PML-Q would have nothing to lose, sources quoted a senior party leader as saying.

“We’ll happily sit on the opposition benches in case we do not get the majority and let the other form the government,” the central leader said, adding that a PPP-PML-N coalition would be a non-starter in the prevailing situation.

The PPP believes that because of the party’s popularity and the sympathy factor after the assassination of Ms Bhutto it will conveniently get majority seats to form its government at the centre.

However, the PPP sources are yet to spell out their policy about working with President Musharraf.

While the PPP’s public stance is that “we’ll cross the bridge when it comes”, privately its leaders admit that the party is divided on the issue.

“Some people are in favour of working with President Musharraf but others are strongly opposed to the idea,” one leader said, adding that a final decision would be taken by the central executive committee.

Answering a question, he said the party would not give a blanket indemnity to the steps taken by President Musharraf on and after Nov 3.

The PPP would not validate the removal of judges or the promulgation of Pemra laws, he said, adding, however, that steps taken to run day-to-day matters would be validated.

Asked why would the PPP not adopt a uniform approach for all the steps taken by the president on or after Nov 3, he said, the party would have to see the policy of other parties.

He indicated that the PPP might refuse to accept the results if the elections were rigged.

Replying to a question, he said the PPP was an anti-Musharraf party and there should be no doubt about it.

The PML-N has already declared that it would not cooperate with President Musharraf at any cost.

Q-League likely to let PPP, PML-N form govt -DAWN - Top Stories; February 15, 2008
 
Musharraf hits out at ‘biased’ opinion polls

By Ahmed Hassan

ISLAMABAD, Feb 14: President Pervez Musharraf has rejected opinion surveys conducted by foreign organisations and said opinions of 3,000 people cannot be taken as the opinion of 160 million people of the country.

He asked foreign organisations and NGOs, especially those conducting such surveys not to “disturb the peace of this region. You are playing with the peace of the world.”

Addressing a conference, ‘Unite for Elections’, organised by the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting here on Thursday, the president said that the media and foreign organisations must not create a perception that the elections were rigged. “It would push us into a bind,” he said, adding that he and his government were trying to take the country out of this bind. “It will seriously harm the country.”

He warned against what he called exaggerated expectations of political parties taking part in the polls and said that ground realities should be accepted and results should be allowed to speak for themselves. “Whoever wins may form the government and if there is no majority for a single party, there can be a coalition government.”

Expressing doubt about the people selected for the opinion polls, President Musharraf said that the NGOs involved were biased against the government. “Declaring certain candidates or parties winner is malicious and disturbs peace.”

He assured that the Feb 18 elections would be free, fair and transparent and said that pre-judging election results raised undue hopes and might result in violence during and after the polls.

The elections would be rigging-free and peaceful as the whole world would be watching, he said, adding that no-one would be allowed to disturb peace and the election process.

President Musharraf said that the country was combating extremism and terrorism and the environment of agitation and chaos would not be tolerated.

He warned those planning an agitation during and after the elections and said: “All those who think that they could disturb country’s peace must not test the resolve of the government.”

He said that some parties were claiming 80 per cent results in their favour which, he added, amounted to creating false expectations.

The president said he was the “greatest believer” in democracy which could take the country forward on the path of socio-economic development and not towards economic bankruptcy and a failed state.

He called upon the people not to be misled by any deceit and false propaganda and to differentiate between reality and myth.

Minister for Information Nisar Memon said that a free media was vital for democracy. He said that the people themselves would judge the outcome of the elections.

Musharraf hits out at ‘biased’ opinion polls -DAWN - Top Stories; February 15, 2008
 
Will Pakistan elections herald change?

By Lyse Doucet
BBC News


Monday's national and provincial elections in Pakistan are meant to be a key step in a tortuous process of moving Pakistan from military to civilian rule.
They are essentially a referendum on nearly nine years of rule of President Pervez Musharraf.

That rule began with a coup in 1999 widely welcomed within Pakistan.

Mr Musharraf is not actually running in these parliamentary polls but his popularity will be manifested in votes cast for the party that backs him - the Pakistan Muslim League (PML- Q), known as the "King's Party".

The president has dismissed a series of polls from foreign organisations that show his popularity has plummeted. "They are carrying out opinion polls through NGOs who abuse us," he told government officials in Islamabad.

Ghost of Benazir Bhutto

But there's a powerful factor against Mr Musharraf at play in the campaign - the shocking assassination of Benazir Bhutto on 27 December. This election is expected to deliver not just the solid vote bank of her Pakistan People's Party, but a wave of sympathy that's hard to quantify.

Ms Bhutto's ghost hangs over this race.

Her iconic image is everywhere in her party's campaign. Her last rousing speech at that fateful rally in Rawalpindi is blasted through loudspeakers at election gatherings for candidates vowing to carry on in her name.

They know she is still one of biggest vote-getters of all.

And if the results don't deliver a resounding victory to the Pakistan People's Party and gains for the Pakistan Muslim League (N) of former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, this will almost certainly provoke calls for street protests and a very real risk of violence and turmoil.

The military question

The big question is: can a president who last year purged the Supreme Court, imposed a state of emergency, and arrested thousands of his opponents accept a "free and fair and transparent" verdict?

He told the BBC he would leave power when he had the "feeling" his people no longer supported him. And, for now, he doesn't feel that's the case.


On his recent swing through Europe, he tried to convince the world he was still their best bet for stability and democracy.

The role of the army is crucial.

In this potent political cocktail, there's another new element in the mix - the recently appointed army chief, Gen Ashfaq Kayani.

So far, Gen Kayani has won praise for his efforts to send a strong message that the army has no place in politics. Serving soldiers, including members of the Inter Services Intelligence (ISI), have been told they cannot meet politicians.

But this is a country where the army has ruled for more than half of its 61 year old history and where the ISI is known to have always played a role manipulating elections.

"We've seen it before," said one human rights campaigner. "There's a manual and it starts, as always, with a new military chief and a positive reception."

Scepticism and fear

Pressure at home and in foreign capitals has helped push Pakistan a few steps forward on this bumpy road to a more democratic future.

In December Gen Musharraf reluctantly took off his military uniform. And there's been only a relatively short delay of a few weeks in holding elections since Ms Bhutto's assassination.

But such is the scepticism and fear surrounding these polls that, even in the last days before polling, many Pakistanis around the country still say they expect "something" would happen to stop them.

The biggest test will be the day after.

Can politicians, long at daggers drawn, work together? There's no love lost between the party backing President Musharraf, the PML-Q, and other major political forces.

It's hard to exaggerate the risks of failure.

Now, more than at any other time in Pakistan's chequered history, there are deeply felt grievances that could pull this federation apart.

They could also fuel a growing pro-Taleban insurgency provoking fear even among Pakistan's bravest defenders of democracy.

Losers cry foul

Alongside all of this is the issue of how fair the vote will be.

President Musharraf has promised they would be "free, fair, transparent and peaceful".

But the run up to Monday's polls has been anything but peaceful - more than 400 people have been killed in violence in this year alone. And there is profound doubt, at home and abroad, that these polls will truly be free, fair and transparent.

Mr Musharraf points out that in Pakistan's elections the loser always cries foul.

That certainly was the case in elections I've witnessed, including during the 1990s when power shifted back and forth between Benazir Bhutto's Pakistan People's Party and Nawaz Sharif's Pakistan Muslim League.

The losers always had good reason to complain, even if it didn't always make the difference between winning or losing.

Even by those standards, this election stands out.

"We have not seen any form of rigging that is not being used this time," says prominent lawyer Asma Jahangir, who heads the country's Human Rights Commission.

"All the rigging used over the years is included in this one, from false ID cards, to discrepancies in polling lists, to changing polling stations."

'Black hole'

And yet, this time, so much is at stake - for Pakistan and the international community - that there's intense scrutiny of the process leading up to the vote.

The US administration intervened to urge Pakistan to publish the results of local polling stations which are aggregated at a district level. Both foreign and Pakistani election experts point to this "black hole" as a possible tool to manipulate the numbers.

When Richard Boucher, the US Assistant Secretary of State for South Asia, was asked about possible fraud, he replied: "On a scale from terrible to great, it'll be somewhere in the middle."

This "it's good enough" approach grates on Pakistan's burgeoning civil society who are on the front line of battles waged on the streets and in the media to push this country towards something approaching a more genuine democracy.

"Five to ten per cent (of vote rigging) is always there, but we can't afford anything but a fair election," comments political analyst Nasim Zehra.

"This is a key opportunity to take us forward, beyond the mess we are now in."
 
As Pakistan vote nears, spotlight falls on army chief.

By Laura King, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

February 15, 2008

RAWALPINDI, PAKISTAN -- He's invariably described as a soldier's soldier, a highly professional and disciplined commander who is determined to keep himself and the formidable army he leads out of politics.

But Gen. Ashfaq Kayani, 55, who took over as army chief of staff less than three months ago when President Pervez Musharraf relinquished command, will need both luck and skill to steer clear of an increasingly turbulent political scene.

For decades, Pakistan's army has shaped the country's destiny. And though Kayani has moved quickly since taking command to distance it from affairs of state, analysts say that he and the military could find themselves unwilling participants in the drama expected to play out after Monday's parliamentary elections.

This vote was once envisioned as marking a peaceful end to Pakistan's transition to civilian rule more than eight years after Musharraf seized power in a military coup. Instead, the assassination of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, Musharraf's plunge in popularity over the last year and other factors have set the stage for what could be a period of intense turmoil.

Kayani, an infantry commander from a working-class background, may be forced to take sides -- to put down protests, or even ask Musharraf to step aside.

No one knows how Musharraf might react if his allies are dealt the crushing electoral defeat that polls are forecasting. Late last year, as Pakistan's Supreme Court heard legal challenges to his rule, the president imposed de facto martial law for six weeks, deposing judges and cracking down on political opponents.

But if the Pakistan Muslim League-Q, aligned with Musharraf, does well and the opposition suspects large-scale vote-rigging, his foes have threatened to send supporters into the streets in protest.

Kayani, whose name has been spelled Kiani, could find himself being told to use his troops to keep order, although the army would probably be called in only if paramilitary forces were unable to subdue rioters.

Musharraf has explicitly warned opponents against trying to stage large-scale protests over the results. "No agitation, anarchy or chaos will be acceptable," he said Thursday in a televised speech in which he promised that the balloting would be fair.

Another difficult prospect for Kayani would be if Musharraf's opponents win control of the parliament and try to impeach the president. Political leaders and perhaps senior army officers could look to Kayani, a four-star general, to deliver the news to his onetime mentor that it would be best if he stepped aside.

"If anyone can steer a course through all this, it's probably him," said a Western military official in Islamabad, the capital, who has known Kayani for several years. "But his is certainly not a position that anyone would envy right now."

Soon after taking over as chief of the army, Kayani made it clear that disentangling it from politics was a top priority.

Last month, he directed his senior officer corps to curtail contacts with politicians. He has also issued a directive to remove hundreds of ranking military officers from senior jobs in the civilian bureaucracy, a step that analysts say will go a long way toward reducing the army's pervasive influence in policy matters, the economy and other aspects of public life.

"From the steps he's taking, it's clear at this point that he wants to put the army back on a constitutional path," said military analyst Nasim Zehra, a Harvard fellow.

Kayani has declared that the army will have no role in the elections other than providing security. In previous polls, opposition leaders charged that military intelligence played a key role in vote-rigging and intimidation of government opponents.

Thousands of soldiers have been deployed across Pakistan in preparation for the vote. But they are under orders to stay away from polling places unless they are specifically called on to help deal with a threat.

Since Kayani took command, the army also has made some of its most forceful moves in years against Islamic militants in the tribal areas along the border with Afghanistan and other parts of northwest Pakistan. That momentum slowed in recent days after militant commander Baitullah Mahsud declared a cease-fire. In turn, the army appeared to scale back its operations.

Western officials have said the military lacks a coherent strategy against the militants, but the Bush administration appears confident that the U.S.-trained Kayani is willing and ready to retool his forces and refine his tactics as necessary.

Kayani has met in recent weeks with high-ranking American visitors, and there was no mistaking the respect accorded him, even as tough demands were being conveyed.

U.S. Navy Adm. Michael G. Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, began his main day of meetings here last week with a session with Kayani, not Musharraf.

Kayani's relationship with Musharraf remains unclear.

In the military, the two men were considered close. Under Musharraf, Kayani held sensitive posts, including that of head of the powerful Inter-Services Intelligence agency, which at the time of his appointment had a history of ties to radical groups, including the Taliban. Kayani also was assigned to personally investigate a pair of assassination attempts against the Pakistani leader.

Musharraf issued a reminder before handing the baton to Kayani that as president, he remains commander in chief. He also insisted that he would continue to play an influential role in an army in which he served for four decades.

Musharraf, now officially retired, wears a business suit instead of his uniform, but he has yet to vacate his personal quarters and offices in the sprawling military cantonment at Rawalpindi, just outside Islamabad.

Kayani, though widely respected within the ranks, is something of an anomaly in the top military echelon. He comes from humble beginnings rather than the patrician background of most other senior officers. Tall and solemn-faced, he is a man of few words, which can cause some to initially underestimate him. But those who have served with him say he radiates a calm authority.

Although Kayani attended the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College at Ft. Leavenworth, Kan., he lacks the polished air of some of his peers. They speak easy British- or American-accented English in contrast to Kayani's slightly labored speech, and are the sons and grandsons of senior officers, often with family wealth to fall back on.

Absent such advantages, Kayani is credited with rising through the ranks by dint of his abilities, first as an infantry commander and later as director general of military operations, a key command post he held during a tense border standoff with India.

The Pakistani military has traditionally been one of the country's most respected institutions. But there is a growing sense that citizens feel less of a bond with soldiers, a development that has eroded morale in the ranks.

Several former officers said the estrangement springs partially from the notion that Pakistani soldiers are fighting a proxy war for the United States against the Taliban and Al Qaeda, a battle that is not necessarily regarded as being in Pakistan's interest.

Musharraf's long tenure as both president and military chief, and his suspension of the constitution last year, is also seen as having tarnished the army, they said.

As the country's political crisis has deepened, Musharraf has been the target of frank public criticism from retired officers. A group of them urged him to resign in a sharply worded letter last month, and recent gatherings of ex-officers have turned into raucous anti-Musharraf forums.

Most analysts agree that Kayani could move against Musharraf, however reluctantly, if he believed that the president's actions were damaging the army's standing.

"I think Musharraf will have understood by now that Kayani will not bail him out," said Shaukat Qadir, a retired brigadier general who is now a political analyst.

Kayani then could find himself in the position he had most hoped to avoid: that of catalyst for political change.

"In the end, his loyalty is to the institution of the military," said analyst Zehra. "Not to any one man."

laura.king@latimes.com
 
In effect he's saying he wants a puppet Prime minister to lead PPP, while he structures the party so that he takes 10% presumably. Not good enough. If Pakistanis don't vote in Musharraf, it'll be their heads.
 
Anybody who votes for PML-N needs their head examined. He is an internal enemy of Pakistan.
This should be on the front page of the jang newspaper.


A Campaign Of Mass Deception

A major flaw in the Pakistani electorate is its quickness to ‘forgive and forget’ the faults of civilian rulers and quickly blame the military for the misfortunes befalling Pakistan. While military rule might be considered dictatorship but the truth is that they have always replaced despotism masquerading as democracy. Every ‘democratic’ leader in Pakistan thus far has been a tyrant and a manipulator of the magical word, only interested in consolidating power, amassing personal wealth and hoodwinking the public, least interested in tackling the real issues facing the populace.

By NOSHEEN SAEED
Friday, 15 February 2008.
Ahmed Quraishi-Pakistan/Middle East politics, Iraq war, lebanon war, India Pakistan relations


ISLAMABAD, Pakistan—''Go, Nawaz, go!'' chanted the crowds. ''Remove Nawaz, save the country,'' shouted thousands of protesters in an anti-government rally march towards the provincial Parliament to demand the resignation of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif.

Traditional opposition parties and hard-line Islamic groups joined the chorus including Watto, Imran Khan, Rao Sikander, Shah Mehmood, Chatta, Nawabzada Nasrullah, Aftab Sheikh and Tahir-ul-Qadri.

In another demonstration organized by Qazi Hussain Ahmad’s Jamaat-i-Islami Qazi declared, "Now Nawaz and Pakistan cannot go together. He will have to quit".

Qazi claimed that Sharif's tenure was the blackest of all periods and called for Jehad against his government. Imran Khan remarked, "Nawaz runs Pakistan like a Mughal-e-Azam. It’s a sham democracy. We are heading for anarchy.”

Late Mrs. Bhutto stated from London, “The government must resign paving way for fresh elections under a neutral set-up. The government has lost its political and moral legitimacy.”

Prime Minister Sharif played down the significance of the demonstrations in public saying they cannot reverse the huge majority that he won in the election in February 1997. The police was ordered to open fire at the opposition crowd and marchers showed reporters blood spots on their clothes and signs of beatings.

All this happened during a “democratically elected government” whose landslide mandate had a few parallels in the country’s history with perhaps the solitary exception of East Pakistan’s Mujibur Rehman in 1970.

A major flaw in the Pakistani electorate is its quickness to forgive and forget the faults of civilian rulers and quickly blame the military rulers for misfortunes befalling Pakistan.

While military rule might be considered dictatorship but the truth is that they have always replaced despotism “masquerading as democracy”. Every "democratic" leader in Pakistan thus far has been a tyrant and a manipulator of the magical word, only interested in consolidating power, amassing personal wealth and hoodwinking the public, least interested in tackling the real issues facing the populace.

Sharif’s second stint in power qualifies him to fall into this category. By the time he had completed his first year in office he had successfully damaged all established institutions of the country and set the stage of total autocratic reign indulging in personal corruption, and political megalomania.

This included repealing the president's constitutional power to dismiss governments, (13th Constitutional Amendment) bringing the parliament virtually under his thumb, (14th Constitutional Amendment) forcing the resignations of the chief justice of the supreme court (1997 Constitutional Crisis) and of an Army Chief, and cracking down on the press and nongovernmental organizations (NGOs).

The first important example of the tussle between the executive and the judiciary was the confrontation between the Chief Justice and the Prime Minister in 1997, when the Chief Justice held Sharif in contempt of court for using derogatory language against him and other judges. This episode was resolved in Sharif’s favour when he created a revolt in the Supreme Court that led to the Chief Justice’s resignation.

It was amusing to read the “tamer of the Judiciary” stating that his first order if he returns to power would be to restore the deposed judges and return an independent judiciary to the country.

Why did he not practice in power what he is preaching today or is he suffering from amnesia and doesn’t remember that he as PM unleashed his entire propaganda machinery to undermine the independence of the Judiciary?

He had no patience for independent judges and thought nothing of replacing those who disagreed with him and used the Supreme Court’s benches to take vengeance on opponents, to silence opposition leaders and to uphold his government’s decisions. The judges under political influence use to pass the judgment first and hear the witnesses later. Political workers in a premeditated attack, invaded the Supreme Court several times, with weapons, abused the judges, indulged in violence and forced the overthrow of the Chief Justice which not even Pakistan's previous rulers - civilians or dictators ever did.

Today he talks of “press freedom” which he tried to curb within “one month” of power by passing “the Registration of Printing Press and Publication Ordinance, 1997” which authorized magistrates and sub inspectors to initiate executive actions including the forfeiture of newspaper copies without the process of judicial review and restraint. The intolerance unleashed saw newspapermen not already silenced by tax investigations directly arrested and beaten and individual journalists harassed and intimidated.

Today Zia-ul-Haq’s protégé claims to be a “democracy campaigner” fighting for the constitution and the rule of law that he repeatedly trampled under his feet with draconian laws such as the Ehtesab Accountability Law, under which a number of prominent politicians and bureaucrats of the opposition party were arrested and detained. The Anti- terrorism Act or license to kill empowered the law enforcing agencies to kill a person on mere suspicion and to search houses and arrest people without a warrant. The law turned the country into a police state, violating the constitution and fundamental rights. Military courts were set up for the trial of civilians without lawful authority and human rights violations such as extra-judicial killings, staged encounters, deaths in police custody and floggings were rampant.

To buttress his power further and ensure undisputed and indefinite rule Sharif used Islam as means to an end, to establish a new Islamic order by imposing Shariat (15th Constitutional Amendment) which meant being crowned as Ameer-ul-Momineen empowered to enforce what he thought was right and prohibit what he considered was wrong in Islam, irrespective of what the constitution or any judgment of the courts said. Wasn’t that establishment of theocratic fascism? It was during Sharif’s tenure that Islamic laws were promulgated in the Malakand Division and Kohistan districts of Hazara Division, in 1999 The Ismaeli community of Chitral vigorously protested against the introduction of Islamic regulations.

On the economic front Sharif’s blunders were phenomenal. His government’s Ehtesab bureau suspended the operations of many foreign investors who had set up independent power plants (IPPs) to generate and supply much-needed electric power to the country. The reason cited was that the IPPs had been bribed by the previous Benazir government. The net effect of the government’s action against the IPP’s was to scare off potential foreign investors who preferred not to risk their own contracts being terminated at the whim of one or another government.

The government imposed a state of emergency after conducting its first nuclear tests. Fundamental rights were suspended in an apparent move aimed at freezing the foreign currency accounts of the people which further undermined domestic and foreign investor confidence. 13 billion dollars in the FCAs, including three billion dollars of overseas Pakistanis evaporated. The Supreme Court unanimously upheld the imposition of emergency. When the Lahore High Court declared void Section 2 of the Foreign Exchange (Temporary Restriction) Act, 1998, freezing foreign currency accounts and ordered their immediate restoration the court was told that the federal government had consumed all foreign currency deposits much before the May 28 nuclear explosions and the May 29 accounts freeze order. The fixation of an arbitrary exchange rate, the issuance of dollar bonds and the liquidation of FCAs as loan security were all intended to provide legal cover to its misappropriation and to evade its obligations.

Sharif claims he left a peaceful and progressive Pakistan. On the contrary he left Pakistan marred with political assassinations, religious discrimination, sectarian strife, bomb blasts and Talibinization. Pakistan’s Oppressed Nations Movement was formed in 1998 because of suppressed political anger against Punjab. Pakistan was plagued with financial scams, banks defaults, sugar and wheat scandals and fraudulent anti-debt drive of Karz Utaro, Mulk Sawaro. The public exchequer was robbed dry. Pakistan was declared a failed state on the brink of economic collapse, surviving on a life- support system, gasping; while Sharif’s business empire abroad rose astronomically.

Ms. Saeed is an Islamabad-based politician and columnist. She can be reached at nosheensaeed58@hotmail.com
 
The Future of Democracy in Pakistan
By Nasim Hassan
Delaware, US

Pakistan is in the eye of media storm these days. There is not a single day when the news in the USA does not include Pakistan in one way or another. Sometimes it is about the rise of fundamentalism, at other it is about election or the civil society demonstrating against dictatorship.
Let us look at the basic facts of geography that Pakistan cannot change. The country is surrounded by two rising Asian powers of China and India on the North East and South. In the North and West we have two neighbors that aspire to bring religion into mainstream politics. Here I am talking about Iran and Afghanistan. Majority of people in Iran and Afghanistan are serious about establishment of a society based on their interpretation of Islamic Sharia
Pakistan is diverse in its ethnic population with Punjab constituting a dominant group. This ethnic diversity includes 56% Punjabi, 12 % Mohajirs, 14 % Pashtuns, 7% Baluch and 12 % Sindhi people. In addition to ethnic diversity, Pakistan also has various religious groups. People believe in their own schools of religious interpretations. However, this ethnic or religious diversity is not so rigid. Almost all people can communicate in Urdu language and common people are tolerant. The people at the top are highly educated and they do not go by any ethnic or religious differences. For these people the first and perhaps the last criteria for association, friendship and relations is wealth. The educated middle class is significant and generally sticks to its clan, tribe or linguistic group. The poor people by local standards live in small villages all across Pakistan. This class, though quite large, is still controlled by feudal lords and religious leaders.
Based on above facts the Western style democracy or religion-based theocracy is simply not viable. For the foreseeable future, the political leadership can only come from the affluent class who own either land or industrial enterprises. The emergence of middle class political leadership is still in the distant future. The reason being the lack of ideological political environments. Currently the politics is based on feudalism, ethnic affiliation or religious and tribal connections.
Let us examine the conditions that support the democratic process in a rational manner and see where Pakistan stands on various factors that support democracy.
Established Civil Institutions:
Pakistan does have institutions like Judiciary, Bureaucracy, Law Enforcement agencies, Planning Commission, Election Commission, Revenue Collection system and Educational institutions. Frankly none of them is very strong or honest. Corruption is rampant owing to various reasons of greed, nepotism and politics.
I have personally observed highly educated people preferring candidates from their own ethnic or religious backgrounds and discarding people who have education, merit and experience.
If at any time Pakistanis want real democracy then they will need to respect the law and make these institutions strong with effective checks and balances. All democratic countries make institutions strong and enduring. People come and go but institutions keep on functioning.
First institution that needs to be strengthened is Judiciary. However judiciary should not interfere in administration or parliamentary process. Independent judiciary does not mean to put politicians behind the bars on trumped up charges.
Gradually the judiciary in Pakistan has started to assert its rights and that is a good sign. Hopefully, we can look towards a future where judicial process will be free from any outside influences.

Defense from Outside Aggression
Regardless of the form of government the defense of the country is of vital importance. Weak countries cannot survive even in the 21st century. A weak country invites the powerful neighbors or outsiders to interfere and run the country any way they want. Such countries simply cannot survive.
So all provinces of Pakistan should stop thinking about independent Baluchistan, Sindhu Desh or Pashtunistan. Any such breakup will invite outside interference and colonization will occur. Only a united country can become strong. The current situation in Africa and other Third World countries gives us good lessons.
Small countries can only survive in larger enclave like European Economic Community and NATO. Otherwise small countries can be quickly dismantled and reconfigured.
Pakistan has over the past sixty years spent large amounts on defense. Although I am not an expert on defense issues, I believe Pakistan has strong defense capabilities. So on this score Pakistan is well on the road towards democracy.

Freedom of News Media
Slowly but steadily Pakistan is moving towards a free and vibrant news media. I scan Pakistani newspapers, magazines and television. I find remarkable freedom of news media as compared to other Third World countries. Just look at the Middle East mass media and compare the news coverage and analysis.
This freedom provides a check on all government institutions. This has started to happen in the mass media. During the early period of Pakistan history, the actions of rich and powerful largely went without any media coverage. Even though rich and powerful still get away the press often catches up with them.
Recent incident like Mukhtar Mai of Meerwala village in Southern Punjab would have gone unnoticed without any news coverage. This time the news was picked up by the national media and flashed across the world.

Emergence of Civil Society
I find it very encouraging that the civil society has started to assert itself and play a role in human rights, helping battered women and reaching out in case of national emergency like the earthquake. These days through the Internet, the civil society reaches out to Pakistanis living overseas as well as other human rights activists. A large number of NGOs have started working in Pakistan. Some are home-grown while others are exclusively supported by external resources. There may be some truth in allegations that some NGOs are pushing the liberal Western agenda. For us this should not be a matter of concern. All Pakistanis are now linked with people everywhere. If any NGO is supported by foreign funds then this money is not coming from the taxes of local people. So long as an NGO is not involved in any criminal activities, it should be allowed to work within its area of specialization.

Rule of law
The first responsibility of any government is to provide security of life and property. No form of government can survive without security. This is linked to the strengthening of judiciary, police, national guards or rangers. First priority must be to maintain peace and prevent criminal elements from destroying public and private property.
In this area, Pakistan has a long way to go. The destruction of property in the aftermath of Ms. Benazir Bhutto’s assassination shows that criminals had no check at all on their activities. No democracy can survive without the rule of law.

Culture of Democracy
The culture of democracy depends upon tolerance and acceptance of alternative point of view. It also means respect for opposition. In democratic societies, politicians keep a level of civility in contesting the elections. They openly criticize the opposition parties with vengeance. However when the elections are over they accept defeat with grace and bow out.
In Third World countries, there is invariably the charge of election rigging. There must be a mutually agreed procedure to investigate the rigging. After the decision has been made by institutions like the Judiciary, election commission or the interim government the politicians must accept the results with grace.
Pakistan lacks in this area like other Third World countries. There have been recent events in Pakistan pointing out the lack of democratic culture. If the culture of democracy is not established by the politicians then political, ethnic, religious, linguistic divide will occur and result in anarchy.

Conclusion
Based on close observations of various elements of democratic process, I believe Pakistan is well on its way towards full-fledged democracy. During the initial period, the army or any nonpartisan institution may be required to facilitate, supervise and monitor free and impartial elections. Law and order must be maintained, otherwise law of jungle could easily prevail.
Pakistanis may disagree with the involvement of military in the democratic process in any shape and form. However, free for all events that have recently occurred in Sindh force me to think about this issue. The situation was brought under control by military intervention. Common people do not want any democracy or elections where their lives or property are insecure.
Watching the mass media openly writing and discussing prevailing conditions gives me great hope for democracy. I am sure Pakistan will pass through this temporary phase and develop the structures to keep democracy on the tracks. Gradually, as institutions get strengthened the army will have no choice except to go back and let the process continue and gain momentum.
 
Election preparations finalized, ballots to be provided tomorrow
Saturday, February 16, 2008

ISLAMABAD: Election Commission of Pakistan has made transparent arrangements for general elections, an election commission official here said.

Talking to Geo News Secretary Election Commission Kunwar Dilshad Saturday said that the election material of international standards has been sent to the concerned officials and ballot papers will be handed over to the Returning Officers tomorrow.

Replying a question about election results, Dilshad said the presiding officers have been directed to hold counting in presence of polling agents of candidates and provide the result to them. The presiding officers would forward the results to the Returning Officers who will immediately announce the result, he further said.

They have been also directed to write the results in words as well as in figures, he said.

The copy of the result will also be provided to media and would be put on at the polling station for general public. The result would later sent to the provincial and central election commissions by fax.

Kunwar Dilshad said no code of conduct has been prepared for media regarding the election. “Media can announce results issued by the presiding officer,” he said.

He said the number of sensitive polling stations in the country is between eight to nine thousands. The polling has been withheld in only one national assembly constituency NA-42 due to law and order situation, he said. Elections have been postponed in other constituencies due to demise of the candidates.

Election preparations finalized, ballots to be provided tomorrow
 
Election to cost Rs200bn

KARACHI, Feb 15: The elections for the National Assembly and provincial legislatures would cost a record Rs200 billion, according to projections based on a survey carried out by a team of journalists. The sum includes expenses incurred by the federal and provincial governments, election commission, donors, political parties and candidates.

In the absence of any comparable consolidated figures of election-related spending during the 2002 elections, it was not possible to work out the exact increase in the aggregate expenditure. However, most analysts believe, and candidates admit in private conversation, that the expenditure this year is three times that made during the last election.

The spending increases are mainly due to a sharp rise in security costs this time around in view of a volatile political environment and threats of terrorist attacks. The cost has also gone up because the exercise is being conducted on modern lines in order to ensure transparency.

The double-digit inflation, private security arrangements and a new head of expenses related to the electronic media have all done their bit to a big hike in the budget.

The commercials made by the PML-Q for television channels sparked off a competition between political parties for air time. The electronic media’s effectiveness in reaching out out to a largely illiterate populace compelled parties to turn to TV channels.

The survey showed that all political parties and candidates had, for obvious reasons, understated the expenses made by them. However, cautious estimates made on the basis of available data threw up a staggering figure of Rs20 million as the average expenditure for a provincial assembly seat and Rs 50 million for a National Assembly seat.

In contrast, the Election Commission has stipulated a ceiling of Rs1.5 million for a National Assembly candidate and one million rupees for a provincial assembly contestant.

All attempts to trace the sources of financing or the modus operandi of different parties to manage their election budgets were in vain. The candidates seem to be spending without any need or desire to keep proper accounts. There is no way to audit an expenditure that has never been accounted for.

This was but a brief account. For details on the business of elections, look out for a special report on Sunday (Feb 17).

Election to cost Rs200bn -DAWN - Top Stories; February 16, 2008
 

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