By Sultan Shahin
From asianaffairs,
The
This is indeed a defining moment for
Initial indications are good. A systemic shift requires a national government. The nation-wide consensus that has emerged in favour of moderate, liberal, plural, democratic rule needs to be harnessed for the phenomenal changes required to bring about long-term stability required in
The first test of their wisdom would be the priorities fixed by such a government: particular questions like getting rid of the now-civilian President Pervez Musharraf and the restoration of the Chief Justice and the pre-PCO (Provisional Constitution Order) judges, as Nawaz Sharif would have it, or the general problems of religious extremism, poverty alleviation, provincial autonomy, independence of judiciary, sovereignty of parliament and freedom of media, etc., as ANP leader Asfandayar Wali would have it. Guided by Sharif’s grievances against President Musharraf, and probably a hint of good old vendetta, the government would get mired in endless internecine wars and the country would be destabilised at a time when it is already very troubled and facing enormous challenges. Wali’s priorities are more to the point and set in a larger perspective. Not that the particular questions of Musharraf’s continuation as President or the judges’ restoration are not important. But the country expects to move forward at a great speed from now on in solving its long-term systemic problems and several difficult decisions need to be taken in quite a hurry before that can happen.
It is unlikely that the military and American supporters of President Musharraf will allow him to be impeached. He is the face of the Pakistan Army and unless his continuation starts threatening its corporate interests, he is unlikely to lose its backing, though it may go along with his powers being substantially reduced. Even if he is replaced, the post will have to be given to somebody who has the backing of the military and the
It is doubtful, however, that President Musharraf, if he survives politically and whether his wings are clipped or not, would be so foolish as to start interfering in governance right away. He or his replacement will bide his time and wait for the politicians to again make the same mistakes, run the economy aground, unleash a reign of corruption and sleaze, incompetence and mismanagement. They would do well to remember that every time the Pakistani electorate has been given a fair chance it has voted out the incumbent government, whether it had been democratically elected or was backed by the military. They may have braved the threat of violence and fear of massive rigging to go out and boot out the military-backed regime, but they had also welcomed with great fervour and hope General Musharraf deposing the democratically elected government of Sharif and taking power in his own hands. This shows that there is already a background of distrust against politicians in Pakistan, both those elected in free and fair elections and those brought unfairly by the military in rigged polls. But as they have no alternative, they keep changing the same horses.
This gives the politicians little space for manoeuvring and even less time to succeed. They just have to deliver. And quickly. The electorate at the moment has great hopes. These hopes are not centred around the removal of Musharraf or reinstatement of judges. They want peace and prosperity. The outgoing government has not taken tough economic decisions for some time. The first thing any government will have to do is to take measures that will fuel inflation and bring hardship to people. If this is coupled with mismanagement and corruption, the people may start losing patience quickly.
Islamic extremists have suffered grievously in this election. The public has shown where it stands on this question. Now it is time for self-styled liberals to show guts, something they have not done since the formation of
Above all, they have a mandate for improving ties with
Only these and other such hard decisions taken rather quickly before the window of opportunity closes will bring about a systemic shift in Pakistan politics and lead to the establishment of a healthy liberal democratic set-up that no undemocratic force will be able to interfere with.
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