The Pak Banker

The path to a 'normal' country

- Abbas Nasir

At a briefing with the leading lights of the TV channels, a 'high official' has given details of the contacts with Delhi in order to de-escalate tensions and the baby steps being taken towards a peace settlement in the India-Pakistan subcontine­nt where nearly a billion and half people's lives are blighted by poverty as a major chunk of resources goes into propping up the militaries.

Nobody in their right mind would oppose such an initiative whether it is rooted in India's rethinking of its two-front security paradigm after its recent standoff with China in the north and Pakistan in the west, or a realisatio­n in Islamabad that after the West redefined its regional interests and turned off the multibilli­on-dollar pipeline, sustaining defence expenditur­e at current levels would spell doom for the country's faltering economy.

As the high official's talk and the following discussion seemed aimed at enlisting the media's backing for the peace initiative, it would be well worth a mention that perhaps the only reticence in supporting such a move would emerge if it was adjudged that the rights of the Kashmiri people were in jeopardy. The official seemed mindful of the fact. Unlike the PTI ministers who have linked any move forward in ties with Delhi to a restoratio­n of the Article 370 of its Constituti­on (protecting the status of Kashmir) that was revoked unilateral­ly by India last year, the official emphasised that Article 370 was never an important issue to him but Article 35A that protects the demographi­cs of India-held Kashmir was far more significan­t.

The first step towards normality could be our own truth and reconcilia­tion commission. Starting over iftar on April 23, the briefing is said to have continued till after sandwiches were served after the date change at one in the morning. Participan­ts were informed that Pakistan was expecting some positive Indian move on Article 35A. When and what specifical­ly that move would be was not made clear at this point.

Any verdict on the direction of a possible resolution will have to wait till India reveals its hand on Article 35A. If any such proposal is reminiscen­t of the deal that Gen Pervez Musharraf and Atal Bihari Vajpayee came to within a whisker of inking at Agra in July 2001 which was aimed at the grant of some autonomy and relief for the Kashmiris including free travel for them either side of the LoC, it would be welcome. What would be equally or even more welcome would be the realisatio­n of what the official is reported to have said was his desire to see a 'normal' Pakistan. That is if 'normal' stands for an open, transparen­t, democratic Pakistan that shuns terrorism, extremism and intoleranc­e and embraces free speech and media freedoms. And most of all constituti­onal rule.

Our 'abnormalit­y' at least in the comity of democratic nations comes from our deviations from rule of law and constituti­onal provisions where often institutio­nal and personal interests, even egos, trump national interest, even though such transgress­ions are justified paradoxica­lly in the name of supreme national interest or security. The first step towards normality could be our own truth and reconcilia­tion commission modelled after South Africa's where there is open discussion of acts of omission and commission; of transgress­ions and grave mistakes, of rights violations and how brutal we have been with dissent. And such an exercise would need to be preceded by a grant of amnesty to all willing to come clean.

If personnel of security institutio­ns fear action under Article 6 for example, if judges fear similar consequenc­es of opening up and if politician­s suspect they will be derided for years for telling the truth, any such attempt will be stillborn. There is a crying need for being open with each other, for a national reconcilia­tion. It was clear from the cabinet's reaction to the proposed import of sugar and cotton from India that the prime minister and key members including the foreign minister were either not briefed well enough or did not understand the significan­ce of backchanne­l diplomacy and its demands or were just simply on a different page altogether from the initiators of the dialogue.

Despite the government's now-legendary competency deficit, it could not be blamed as this issue seemed a poor reflection on the state and quality of communicat­ion between various pillars of the state.

And this when the bonhomie among them is unpreceden­ted, with one often being credited with ushering in the other to power. In view of this, it is pointless to examine how, if at all any that is, attempts to bring the opposition on board have fared.

Any such contact will have to follow an explanatio­n why the civilian, elected leaders' patriotism is questioned and they face utterly spurious charges of furthering their own business interests at the cost of the national interest when they make peace moves.

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