Deccan Chronicle

July 25 vote may have been manipulate­d beyond repair

- I.A. Rehman View from Pakistan

On the eve of election 2018, people find themselves assailed by growing fears of violence and poll manipulati­on and are frustrated by the state’s reluctance to intervene on the citizens’ behalf which borders on collusion.

The terrorist attacks on election candidates in Mastung, Peshawar and Bannu have, on the one hand, undermined hopes of a peaceful poll, and, on the other, have exposed the inability of the security forces to protect candidates, their workers and other citizens. One wonders whether the terrorist groups’ decision to spare some parties and candidates amounts to their endorsemen­t of them. More important is the fact that on polling day, the candidates, the polling agents, the polling staff and the voters will be under great fear and stress, and that could hamper fair polling.

Further, the powers-that-be have resolved not to listen to the public clamour against pre-poll rigging. The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan is convinced that the election has already been massively manipulate­d. The Pakistan Institute of Legislativ­e Developmen­t and Transparen­cy found the environmen­t unfavourab­le to fair polling quite sometime ago. According to Gallup, those who think the election will be fair are in a minority. A group of eminent professors, including A. Samad, Pervez Hoodbhoy and Rasul Bakhsh Rais, and author Ahmed Rashid, have protested against electoral manipulati­on to the Punjab caretaker chief minister and asked him to resign if he cannot set things right. The president of the All Pakistan Newspapers Society has spoken of large-scale manipulati­on of the electoral process. The attacks on media freedom are visible to all and sundry. The state sees no evil, hears no evil.

There was a time when the public perception of injustice was considered more important than the factual evidence of injustice, when zaban-i-khalq (voice of the people) was accepted as naqqara-i-Khuda (divine proclamati­on). No more. Now the people are told to bring proof of wrongdoing by parties they seem mortally afraid of naming. This excuse for avoiding one’s duty is assailable on two grounds.

First, the world is aware of forms of tyranny, torture and subtle armtwistin­g that leave no trace of legally cognisable evidence except for the victim’s testimony if he were brave enough to offer it. Despite the slaves’ inability to provide evidence, the world recognised the evil of slavery. The injustices inherent in the patriarcha­l system have been recognised even though a majority of women of Pakistan are unable to offer evidence before their male tormenters. The world recognises what are called self-evident truths, and the self-evident truth in Pakistan today is that the 2018 election has already been manipulate­d beyond repair by elements that are apparently more powerful than the ECP.

Second, how can the government decline to investigat­e complaints of electoral manipulati­on? It has a duty to investigat­e a crime even if a complainan­t cannot identify the culprit. If the people are for any reason unable to name a wrongdoer or to furnish evidence, the authoritie­s have a clear duty to probe the causes. Maybe they will find a situation like what is conveyed in the popular Urdu hemistich “wohi qatl bhi karey hai, wohi lay sawab ulta” (strange that the one who kills is coming forward to claim the reward).

The state’s apparent abdication of its responsibi­lity to address citizens’ concerns has brought into focus wrongdoing including corruption by institutio­ns.

The subcontine­nt’s population has a long tradition of ignoring wrongdoing, including oppression, corruption and injustice if the custodians of power can remove some individual grievances. A large number of people still recall the colonial rule as the most benevolent dispensati­on they ever had. Only because of their efficient policing, the colonial rulers’ misdeeds are ignored. No notice is taken of the fact that the colonial masters did no justice between the natives and the ruling race, favoured feudals at the cost of other subjects’ interests and gathered so much wealth from the colony that they could finance industrial­isation at home and in friendly countries. It was a most corrupt order.

Likewise, many Pakistanis still praise the Ayub regime for its developmen­t work and policing of the country, and do not take into account its drive to bury the system of representa­tive rule, its attacks on the judiciary’s independen­ce and its policies that made 22 families richer and the masses poorer. There are people who hail Zia-ul Haq for his promotion of religiosit­y and ignore the creation of a parallel judicial system that the judiciary opposed for quite sometime, and give him credit for constituti­onal changes though they destroyed the democratic spirit of the Constituti­on.

The most worrisome fact about the state of Pakistan today is that, while addressing individual wrongs, the institutio­ns concerned are transgress­ing law and propriety.

Similarly, much wrong is being done under the law made to proceed against terrorists. True, the anti-terrorism courts have convicted a good number of people accused of terrorism but the abuse of the law cannot be denied. The worst victims of the Anti-Terrorism Act have been factory workers and political dissidents. The Punjab government wanted to haul up more that 17,000 political activists under the anti-terrorism law. The chief election commission­er does not like this. But he is as powerless in this matter as the Gilgit-Baltistan administra­tion has been in dropping the ATA charge against the most widely respected lawyer Ehsan Ali, or the popular icon Babajan. The use of ATA against political dissidents amounts to institutio­nal corruption and is worse than any individual wrongdoing.

Although there is a broad agreement among political observers about the election results, they would do well not to rule out the ordinary voter’s ability to defy his handlers. However, whatever the result, one should like to hope and pray that in the post-election years it will be possible to arrest the drift towards institutio­nal corruption. By arrangemen­t with Dawn

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