Deccan Chronicle

Pressure on Sharif to give Army free hand

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Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif’s fate is said to hang in the balance in light of the publicatio­n of the Panama papers and the legal and political processes that have been set off. In April, the Supreme Court ruled in a 3-2 judgment that the case against Mr Sharif was not conclusive and ordered a joint investigat­ion team (JIT) to probe the allegation­s. The JIT findings are damaging to the PM. Is Mr Sharif in serious trouble, and if so are there implicatio­ns for India?

On Monday, the Pakistan Supreme Court began hearing the different parties — those seeking his resignatio­n and those questionin­g the JIT findings. Due to the Army’s complete control on all other institutio­ns in the country, questions will be asked about the genuinenes­s of the noise raised by the Opposition parties against Mr Sharif’s continuanc­e. For the same reason, the integrity and impartiali­ty of Pakistan’s highest court has been a subject of scrutiny.

The Army on Sunday pointedly sought to distance itself from JIT-related concerns, but few are likely to take these disavowals at face value. A member of the JIT is from the all-powerful spy agency Inter-Services Intelligen­ce, and another from military intelligen­ce. This alone raises a question mark over its findings. The vociferous opposition to Mr Sharif’s continuanc­e has come from Pakistan Tehreeq-e-Insaf leader Imran Khan, who has often given the impression of furthering the military’s agenda.

The JIT has asked for the reopening of 15 old corruption-related cases against Mr Sharif. A large number of these are from the time when Gen. Pervez Musharraf had seized power in a coup, overthrowi­ng Mr Sharif’s then government.

Given the overall context, it would appear the Army is trying to bring inordinate pressure on the PM so that he may meekly let the military men do whatever they want without asking too many questions, rather than simply eject him. Two other points are relevant here. The end of Mr Sharif’s elected term is just a year away. Two, America’s AfPak policy under President Donald Trump is expected to be announced shortly. A military-abetted civilian sector coup against the elected PM could seriously impact aid disbursal to Pakistan by the United States.

The chances are that Mr Sharif will continue but with ventilator­s attached. From the Indian perspectiv­e, this means the cold spell in bilateral ties could continue or even intensify, as there won’t be even a notional counterwei­ght to the military in decision-making regarding India.

It would appear the Army is trying to bring inordinate pressure on Sharif so that he may meekly let the military men do whatever they want without asking too many questions, rather than simply eject him

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