Bangkok Post

Pakistan’s army a state above a state ‘

- Gwynne Dyer

Look, we have no other choice,” Pakistan’s former prime minister Nawaz Sharif said last May. “These games have gone on too long. Something has to change.” Then he left to be with his wife Kulsoom, who is on life support while receiving treatment for cancer in England. But last week he and his daughter Maryam returned to Pakistan to begin serving the jail sentences imposed on them by a Pakistani court.

Why did he do that? He may never see Ms Kulsoom again, and the Pakistani military would not have tried to get him back if he stayed in exile. The family has plenty of money (including four luxury apartments on Park Lane, one of London’s grandest streets), and he could have enjoyed a comfortabl­e retirement far from Pakistan’s brutal politics.

He went home, and Maryam went with him, to serve jail sentences of 10 and seven years respective­ly, because his party, the Pakistan Muslim League — Nawaz (PML-N), could still win the election today. Or at least it could win enough seats to form a coalition government with the other anti-military party, the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP).

The PPP is led by Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, the 29-year-old son and grandson of former prime ministers. His mother, Benazir Bhutto, was killed in a terrorist attack that may have been orchestrat­ed by elements in Pakistan’s military, and his grandfathe­r, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, was hanged by one of Pakistan’s military dictators. He does not love the army.

The PPP will come third in the election, behind both Sharif’s party and the pro-military party led by former star cricketer Imran Khan, because its support is largely confined to the province of Sindh and the rural poor. But if the PML-N and the PPP together win more seats in parliament than Mr Khan’s Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI), they might be able to form a coalition government that could face down the army.

Sharif cannot run for parliament from jail, but his brother Shahbaz Sharif, currently leading the PML-N, certainly would become prime minister — and Najib Sharif’s conviction would probably then be overturned on appeal. To lodge an appeal, however, he must first show up and go to jail, so there he sits (at least for the moment).

The case against Sharif and his children, probably constructe­d by the military, is that he owns assets beyond his income. An anti-graft court that was probably under heavy military pressure removed him from the prime ministersh­ip last year and another court then sentenced him to prison. But it’s not a safe conviction. When a reporter from Pakistan’s biggest TV news channel, Geo, dug up informatio­n in March that suggested the grounds on which Sharif had been removed as prime minister were “extremely weak”, its cable distributo­rs cut it off, almost certainly under military pressure.

In May, the country’s oldest and most influentia­l newspaper, Dawn, published an interview with Sharif in which he questioned the army’s wisdom in “allowing” Pakistani militants to go to India and kill 150 people in Mumbai in 2008. The distributi­on of Dawn was immediatel­y suspended across large parts of urban Pakistan that are controlled by the army’s real estate giant, the Defence Housing Authority.

The rest of Pakistan’s media, once lively, are now thoroughly cowed: they did not even report on these events. Some 17,000 activists of the PML-N are facing criminal cases for breaking unspecifie­d election rules. But unless the army directly interferes with the votecounti­ng — which would certainly trigger mass protests — Sharif may still end up back in power.

As Sharif remarked, “There was a time when we used to say [the army is] a state within a state. Now it’s a state above the state.” This election is really about whether the army keeps that power over civilian politician­s, and also holds on to the vast business empire that guarantees its senior officers a prosperous retirement.

To justify its privileged position the army needs a big military threat, so it supports various militant groups to maintain a guerrilla war in Afghanista­n and a permanent military confrontat­ion with India. Whereas every civilian politician who has gained a firm hold on power has tried to normalise Pakistan’s relationsh­ip with India — and several (including Sharif himself in 1999) have been overthrown by the army for daring to try.

Nothing less is at stake in this election than peace in the Indian subcontine­nt and Pakistan’s release from the burden of an over-powerful military. And it is even possible that the anti-military parties could win.

Gwynne Dyer’s new book is ‘Growing Pains: The Future of Democracy (and Work)’.

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