Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Radicals win, democracy loses

A politicall­y-unstable Pakistan is a threat to global peace

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M onday showed yet again why Pakistan is dangerousl­y poised. The Pakistan Muslim League (Nawaz) government genuflecte­d to the demands of Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan, a little-known, radical Islamist group, which agreed to call off its three-week long protests

ourtake across Pakistan after law minister

Zahid Hamid resigned. The fringe group, headed by Khadim Hussain Rizvi, demanded the head of Mr Hamid after he released a new version of the electoral oath which it saw as blasphemou­s. The government blinked, tried to pass off the change as a clerical error, and restored the original version, but that was not enough for the radicals.

The PML(N) government has been on the back foot ever since Nawaz Sharif was disqualifi­ed on corruption charges. Last week, a court ordered proceeding­s to declare finance minister Ishaq Dar a proclaimed offender in a graft case. Mr Hamid’s resignatio­n is the latest sign of the civilian government losing its grip on power. Meanwhile, in an all-too-familiar scenario, the army is tightening its grip. The government also failed to present in court a credible case against 26/11 Mumbai terror attack mastermind Hafiz Saeed. What magnifies the threat to democracy in Pakistan manifold is the role the army played in brokering peace between the fringe group and government. Rizvi, while calling off the protests, appreciate­d the efforts of army chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa who played go-between. The judiciary and media in Pakistan criticised the army and government for “surrenderi­ng to radicals”, but that is likely to change nothing given the disproport­ionate power the army GHQ Rawalpindi enjoys. In its recently-released report, Asia in the Second Nuclear Age, US think-tank Atlantic Council, noted how Pakistan’s nuclearwea­pons programme was a security threat to the world and “the surest route to escalating convention­al war to the nuclear level”.

The report shouldn’t come as a surprise to anyone. India has long maintained that a politicall­y-unstable Pakistan is not only a threat to it, but also a threat to regional and global peace. The rise of radical voices, such as Rizvi’s, should be causing alarm bells to go off everywhere.

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