Pakistan Today (Lahore)

Ctrl-alt-del

For babar awan, ppp’s payback for failing to pay back

-

to his conviction in April and eventual disqualifi­cation last month.

Ironically, Awan was so gung ho about not following the court’s directive that in a news conference last year, he proclaimed such a move would be made “over my dead body”. Then, pray, why did he decline to bail out the prime minister, who literally, put his job on the line for the president and their party?

It is speculated that Awan withdrew because he feared the worst after the Supreme Court cancelled his license as a lawyer in an ongoing contempt case.

The former law minister habitually flew off the handle at the higher judiciary with provocativ­e statements in cases filed by or against the PPP. Finally, the law of averages appeared to catch up with him when the Supreme Court hauled him up last January for allegedly bringing the highest judicial authority into disrepute.

In April, Awan apologised but an incensed bench was in no mood to forgive him just because a reluctant word of contrition had been expressed, and that, too, after his counsel initially, argued that charges should not be framed when the accused had thrown himself at the mercy of the court.

Awan probably, reckoned saving his ‘bread and butter’ had priority over party loyalty — in hindsight, a fatal ‘political’ mistake. He had stirred the hornet’s nest once too often and far too indulgentl­y, just to please the president at the court’s expense.

In fact, many are inclined to suggest privately, that it is payback time; hence, the court keeps on adjourning the proceeding­s only to make its bete noir grovel.

Intra-party humiliatio­n is one thing, but Awan is also up against rebuke from the judiciary as well as public ridicule from his political opponents. PML(N) chief Nawaz Sharif and his aides never fail to chide the PPP about the kind of fate that Awan has been dealt with — it is almost as if he has become the first reference point in how to be hoist with one’s own petard.

The Sharifs had long been Awan’s pet peeves, with the latter employing choice analogies bordering on the risqué, and often painted with doomsday scenarios for them.

The one sticking point even within the party rank and file remains how Awan came to pick up the case of Zulfikar Ali Bhutto’s ‘judicial murder’ sent for judicial review last year — 32 years after Bhutto was controvers­ially convicted and hanged over disputed charges of abetting the murder of a political opponent.

The deep-seated resentment stemmed from how Awan (he was a student leader then) had actually distribute­d sweets over Bhutto’s execution. But he swiftly rose through the ranks in the Nineties, when he presented himself to fight a clutch of corruption cases against former prime minister Benazir Bhutto after she was ousted from power, and the current president.

However, the greater irony will remain in how Awan first chose to be more loyal than the king himself and, then, pulled up feet of clay, just when it was time to ‘sacrifice’ the short term for the prized long term — all this in a party whose leadership covets and rewards personal loyalty over everything else.

The writer is a senior journalist based in Islamabad. He may be reached at kaamyabi@gmail.com

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Pakistan