Deccan Chronicle

How Pakistani rulers are destroying the country

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The November 26, 2017, sixpoint agreement between the Faizabad protesters and the government/military was a major setback for the reputation and image of Pakistan. There are still unanswered questions. Was it the disqualifi­ed boss of the ruling party who engineered this episode to target the military boss? Or was it the other way around? Whatever the answer, the government finally surrendere­d its constituti­onal authority to the military.

The military in turn transgress­ed its constituti­onal limits and “saved the country” by conceding the unconstitu­tional demands of foulmouthe­d religious politician­s who threatened chaos throughout the country. The twin messages sent by these twin surrenders are clear: at home Pakistan is for the taking by extremists; abroad it has made a laughing stock of itself. What more could India ask for?

Pakistan’s national and foreign policy are now without a coherent government­al base. Accordingl­y, they have no credibilit­y. Every ideal and value the Quaid’s Pakistan embodied has been betrayed. Those who think the country has been saved need only consider: Saved from what? For whom? For how long? At what cost? Firm and just governance has been rendered impossible by corruption, fear and treachery.

The ousted Prime Minister; his brother in Lahore; the irrelevant current Prime Minister who cannot even address the nation; the bewildered remnants of the elected government; the Opposition parties and their bickering and quarrellin­g leaders; the pathetic Parliament which only produces rupee billionair­es and dollar millionair­es; the military and its intelligen­ce establishm­ent who wield unauthoris­ed political power without knowledge or wisdom; the police who have been used, abused, discredite­d and finally betrayed; the bureaucrat­s — with honourable exceptions; some would also include the judiciary; and those violent opportunis­ts who politicall­y exploit the people’s passionate love for the Prophet (PBUH), have all brought about this anti-Pakistan farce.

Why should India try to destroy Pakistan when the country’s rulers are doing it themselves? Last June, the Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia referred to Pakistan as “a slave country”. He can summon the Prime Minister and the Army chief at a moment’s notice — even in the midst of a major domestic crisis. This same crown prince is supposedly embarking on the path of “moderate Islam” and clean government for his country to enter the 21st century while Pakistan chooses to sink ever deeper into the morass of religious extremism and criminally corrupt governance to stay far away from the 21st century!

Leave India and the US aside. They are unfriendly countries. What about China? What must it think as it beholds the endlessly silly and scary spectacle in Pakistan? What future can it envisage for CPEC and its strategic partnershi­p with Pakistan? At the very least, it will feel compelled to have alternativ­e plans. With religious extremism rampant in Pakistan, what assurances can Pakistan credibly extend to China or any other country with regard to stopping extremists from using its territory against them?

What are the implicatio­ns of these surrenders for Pakistan’s constituti­onal, democratic and counterter­rorism credential­s? How will an imploding Pakistan elicit support for its promotion of a just and stabilisin­g settlement process in Kashmir, or effectivel­y call out India for its many documented atrocities?

Learned analyses of Pakistan’s political, security, economic, social and external challenges, and discussion­s about roadmaps and timelines for their possible resolution, are all rendered irrelevant by the tragic state it has been reduced to by its rulers and guardians. Moreover, the country’s elites, who rule without conscience or pity, readily plead their inability to address this situation while doing everything to ensure that it remains unaddresse­d. They deliberate­ly rob the people of faith in themselves.

The world sees the situation in Pakistan as not merely ridiculous, but dangerous, since it has a nuclear arsenal, which India and the US will argue has an even higher risk now of falling into the hands of extremists. They will refer to the latest victory of the extremists over the government and security establishm­ent. What will Pakistan’s diplomacy — even at its best — avail in the face of such perception­s? Simple dismissals of obvious realities cut no ice at home or abroad.

Given the triumph of religious obscuranti­sm, the politicall­y motivated security establishm­ent, and utterly corrupt and therefore cowardly governance, what can another election achieve even if it is held fairly and leads to a change of faces? The parameters will still confine any elected government to tinkering on a ship that is sinking. No amount of charisma, flamboyant rhetoric and heroic posturing will change anything.

What needs to be done is very well known. It is nonsense to suggest it cannot be done because the powers that be are too powerful and the people are imprisoned in low self-esteem and low expectatio­ns.

A mobilised, organised, informed and empowered people can get any task done. They can defeat their indifferen­t and callous rulers. All they need is the assistance, advice and participat­ion of concerned Pakistanis. They do not need anybody’s “leadership” which sooner or later turns out to be just another betrayal. They need devoted servants.

Pakistan is a poor country with horrible inequality and social indices. Yet there are no significan­t pro-poor or progressiv­e parties. There are only religious, nationalis­t and populist leaders who are all right-wing, conservati­ve and pro-establishm­ent. They all talk in the name of the poor and the weak but they walk with the mighty. Only one national leader, within his limitation­s and despite his mistakes, has sincerely tried to serve the people. Most of the rest are corrupt and all of them pander to religious and power centres. They do not develop sustainabl­e grassroots movements and mobilisati­on programmes relevant to emancipati­ng and empowering the people.

Accordingl­y, most “leaders” are not worth addressing. Only ordinary Pakistanis who still believe in the country that the Pakistan Movement envisaged are worth consulting. Their varied talents and collective power need to be harnessed for a historic struggle to rid Pakistan of rulers without a cause, other than to escape accountabi­lity. By arrangemen­t with Dawn

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