The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

A glimmer of hope for rule of law in Pakistan

Once again, Pakistanis are being reminded of an unfortunat­e pattern. In the nation’s 70-year history, not one prime minister has served out a full five-year term. They have been thrown out by military coups and dismissed by judges. The latest example came

- Editorial courtesy of The Washington Post.

In the nation’s 70-year history, not one prime minister has served out a full five-year term.

The ouster does seem to be another chapter in Pakistan’s seemingly endless flirtation with state failure and chaos. But not so fast. The court’s action suggests it managed to extract some accountabi­lity in a sea of corruption and arbitrarin­ess.

Sharif, who served as prime minister in the 1990s before being ousted by a military coup, was elected in 2013 with a sizeable margin. He has struggled to respond to Pakistan’s economic woes. But his undoing was set in motion in April 2016, by publicatio­n of the Panama Papers, more than 11.5 million leaked files published by an internatio­nal consortium of investigat­ive journalist­s. The papers included nearly four decades of data from a law firm based in Panama, Mossack Fonseca, that disclosed a web of offshore transactio­ns by political leaders around the world.

The papers revealed that three of Sharif’s children owned or could sign authorizat­ions for offshore companies in the British Virgin Islands. This raised questions about the origins of the family wealth. Sharif told the court through his lawyer that he did not own any shell companies or property through offshore holdings himself, without addressing whether his children did. The Panama Papers led to protests, and calls for his resignatio­n, including from opposition party leader Imran Khan, the former cricket star.

The court subsequent­ly created a five-member panel to investigat­e, and the panel’s report accused Sharif’s family of perjury, forgery and hiding assets. It found, among other things, that Sharif’s daughter, Maryam Nawaz, potentiall­y falsified ownership documents that were dated 2006 but written in a font that was not commercial­ly available until 2007. The court then acted unanimousl­y to force him out of office.

Pakistan undoubtedl­y faces a period of political uncertaint­y. The next elections are scheduled for 2018. Meanwhile, Sharif’s ruling party enjoys a strong majority in Parliament. He is expected to install a loyalist as interim prime minister this week and, longer-term, his brother, Shahbaz Sharif, in the post. Whatever the political outcome, Pakistan seems likely not to be shaken from its desire for closer relations with China, which is pouring $50 billion into infrastruc­ture projects as part of its attempt to build a massive trade route. Pakistan’s military and its intelligen­ce service also will remain powerful forces behind the scenes of the Muslim-majority nation, a nuclear weapons state.

Still, Pakistan has so often been a miasma of uncertaint­y, impunity, coercion and violence that it is worth applauding the Supreme Court’s determinat­ion to see this case to a difficult but necessary conclusion. It’s a glimmer of hope for accountabi­lity and rule of law in a nation that could use much more of it.

Pakistan undoubtedl­y faces a period of political uncertaint­y. The next elections are scheduled for 2018.

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