Majyd Aziz
Accusations of rigging in
elections in Pakistan are a normal afterthought of the losing candidates. Some
political parties even boycott the elections for reasons best known to them. However,
during the 2013 elections, the politico-religious Jamaat-e-Islami withdrew
halfway on Election Day. I was present in the voting line on Election Day when all
of a sudden, JI announced they were boycotting. At the same time, 2 MQM workers
were caught red-handed trying to stamp the ballot papers. I immediately called
the MQM candidate for Sindh Assembly (he is an industrialist and one of my
successors as Chairman of SITE Association of Industry which represents 3100
industries in an industrial estate called SITE and is the source of atleast 25%
of the nation’s revenue) to come and sort out the issue. This is one micro
example. In Interior villages and small towns, political dynasties, feudal
class, and other VIPs routinely do it. So, there is nothing new in this political
game.
The success of the Pakistan Muslim
League-N, both in Islamabad as well as in the largest Province, Punjab, was
acclaimed as a new era of economic progress and the loud hurrah from trade and
industry manifested the confidence in Premier Nawaz Sharif and his team. The Sharif
government has gone full force in trying to implement an Energy Policy and for
that they have gone in each and every direction to sign MOUs, agreements, and
proposals. However, these are not immediate solutions although the impression Sharif
and his Ministers give is that uninterrupted and affordable electricity would
be available in few months. The rhetoric has been over-hyped and when people
face 12 hours load shedding then the e.coli hits the fan. The massive country-wide
demonstrations against power outages and exorbitant electricity bills have, at
times, been violent and destructive.
A peculiar trait of Sharif tenures
(present and past) is to announce grandiose projects that, although in the long
run are beneficial and facilitative, but in the short term place a heavy burden
on the meager financial resources of the Treasury. Moreover, Sharif and his
Finance Minister (and father in law of his daughter), Ishaq Dar, have heavily
relied on massive loans from International Development Institutions such as
IMF, WB, ADB etc. The external loans portfolio of Pakistan is abnormally
bloated and would, in the years to come, sledgehammer very critically on the
ability to discharge financial obligations.
Another damaging attitude of Nawaz
Sharif and younger brother Shahbaz Sharif, who is the Chief Minister of Punjab,
is to concentrate on Central Punjab while both the regimes dynamics are
primarily focused on cronyism, nepotism, and family rule. No wonder Pakistan Tehrik-e-Insaf
Chairman Imran Khan calls it a monarchy. To the chagrin of the denizens of the
port city of Karachi, elder Sharif is also not too keen about Karachi from Day
One. Same is the case with the younger Sharif.
Moreover, the arrogance and
haughtiness of his core Ministers has alienated the establishment, media, civil
society and business community. One paramount reason why there is this backlash
against Sharif. It would have done Sharif
well if he had side-lined atleast four of his Kitchen Cabinet Ministers and
brought in fresh and moderate faces. The anti-Army statements regurgitated by
the Defence, Railway and Information Ministers further widened the gap between
Army and Sharif. More than 90% of Army is against Sharif according to senior
political leaders. This is more or less corroborated by the buzz on the streets
and in the drawing rooms. Furthermore, the regal style of him and his family,
the accusations of heavy commissions in mega projects, the stories of
corruption and accumulation of wealth are all factors that are impacting
negatively on his approval rating. In short, according to many analysts and
critics, the peculiar mindset of Sharif may bring about another exile to Jeddah
or London.
Imran Khan does not have an
overwhelming support within the trade and industrial community as much as he
has, or had, with the youth. He is another arrogant, anti-Karachi politician
and will probably not learn from mistakes made by Sharif. But, the fact is that
he has been able to galvanize a substantial following mainly due to his
charisma, his successes on the cricket field, and also due to his philanthropy
such as the Shaukat Khanum Cancer Hospital in Lahore and the NUML University in
his constituency in Mianwali in rural Punjab.
He garnered 34 seats in National
Assembly and his PTI is also the major coalition partner ruling in KPK. There
is a good chance of him gaining lot more seats in the next elections mainly by
accepting the entry of many political fence-sitters (or Lota in Pakistan’s
political lexicon) in PTI. But then he will have to pay the piper. The same
faces will show up and the status quo will be maintained and further entrenched.
If he can move away from this old system, as he often pledges, then there would
be the possibility of a paradigm shift in the political milieu.
There is the probability of many
families of the Armed Forces (active and retired) supporting Imran Khan. One
cannot say for sure whether there is any official backing from the uniformed
people as there is no such obvious indication. Imran Khan’s statements and
oratory usually points towards a bias towards the motives and ideology of the
Taliban although he is dead set against their terrorism and extremism. He
deplores drone attacks and is rabidly anti-American in his public orations. He
would, if elected, gradually favor Indo-Pak trade and investment because this
is going to be a reality whether anyone is in favor or against.
There is always that crowd that
likes to amplify loudly that Pakistan is a failed state and they indulge in the
doom and gloom scenario. The so-called social media activists are mainly
employees of multinationals or are part of NGOs. Some are in the media. They
have little to lose as they can get employment positions at home or in Middle
East etc. They vitiate the already fragile situation and brazenly enjoy
trolling on social media. They don’t represent the masses so it is better to
ignore them because they have no other entertainment but to take up lost causes
and then abandon them midway. The fact is that despite the law and order
situation, despite infrastructure shortages, despite political instability,
Pakistan is managing to survive and gradually progress. It is a fact that The
Global War on Terror has played havoc with the fragile economy, with human
lives, and with peace but the country moves on.
Change in the political landscape
seems imminent and this may come by mid-December. Sharif will not be able to
rule in the manner and style that he is accustomed to and that would be his
downfall. Right now the only face-saving measure is that he should vacate the office
for a few months and that there is Governor Rule in Punjab while his brother
also resigns. Those who were killed in Model Town Lahore must be paid substantial
Diyat (is financial compensation, or blood money paid to the heirs of a victim)
while accused policemen and politicians are given stiff prison sentences. Atleast
three of his arrogant Ministers must resign “voluntarily” from their offices.
All cases against the protestors must be withdrawn. The Speaker of National Assembly
should NOT accept resignations of PTI MNAs.
Army Chief and Chief Justice Supreme Court must act as “guarantors”
although there is no such provision in Constitution. The Election Commission has
to be restructured. Census must be commissioned on priority basis.
Pakistan needs sincere leaders who
are not juvenile or conspiratorial and are serious about reforms and good
governance. Then, and only then, would there be economic progress, with
emphasis on inclusiveness and poverty alleviation. Pakistan has to improve the
negative image in the global environment. Meantime, in the present scenario, Imran
Khan and the cleric Tahir-ul-Qadri must be given official protocol and
prominence and, hopefully soon, Tahir-ul-Qadri will return to Canada. In all
aspects, a National Government is desirable for maximum two years so that the political
mess is mostly cleared. Of course, the mindset and the old habits of
politicians must undergo a fundamental change otherwise it would be back to
Square One and another Islamabad Opera. And, then, the Fat Lady may actually sing.