Election 2008: Unusually Skewed
.General (retd) Musharraf has his Presidency to legitimise, his second coup dÂ’etat to be condoned, and his dismantling of the judiciary to justify. He obviously has a strong compulsion to ensure an electoral win for his own supporters
By Nasim Zehra
Even by Pakistan's own standards of inefficiently managed, chaotically contested and the not-so-fair elections, Election 2008 promises to be a skewed affair. Pakistan goes into the election after one individual, drawing his power essentially from his position as the Army chief, on November 3 opted to become the sole supreme law giver for the country. The only institution, to which Pakistanis can turn to, the Supreme Court of Pakistan, was also reconstructed following November 3.
The PCO clause 3(2) reads: "No judgment, decree, writ, order or process whatsoever shall be made or issued by any court or tribunal against the president or the prime minister or any authority designated by the president", blocks the Supreme Court's Constitutionally mandated authority to judicially review and audit exercise of Executive authority. The president can operates unaccountable.
Only when the Constitution is restored to its pre-November 3 form will this condition of no accountability for the president would alter. Until then the reconstructed Supreme Court has surrendered its responsibility to redress the complaint of any Pakistani against any State excesses tracing their origin to the President. Hence no Presidential order whether seeking amendment in the Army Act or the Legal Practitioners Act can be challenged. The Army Act gives the right to military courts to try civilians while the Legal Practitioners Act undermines the independence of the lawyers.
Significantly, the Courts are also unable to rectify the excesses of the State committed against the media if the State institution is functioning in accordance with the desires of the President. For example the amendments in PEMRA's ordinance and the PEMRA orders under which all the country's independent channels went off air, cannot be challenged in court and be expected to get a fair hearing.
The gagging of the Urdu language television networks means that the popularisation of the actual state of political affairs has been significantly curtailed. Pakistan's largest independent channel ‘geo’ is still banned. Urdu electronic media remains largely silenced. Most popular talk shows, which have exposed the viewers to different sides of a story and helped them to interpret events linked to power and politics, are off air. Yet, key elements of a freely functioning society like a free media cannot turn to the Courts against a State functionary or any State institution that is violating the Constitution of Pakistan.
Clearly under the powers the President gave to himself on November 3 he stands beyond reproach. Under the ‘doctrine of necessity’ the reconstructed court has also submitted to his commands. No one could question the laws that he in his supreme wisdom has imposed on the country. The current reality is that President functions entirely free of any legal or Constitutional fetters.
Reportedly this condition of unaccountable exercise of power is likely to be changed on December 16. Nevertheless interests of strategically located personalities are at stake, as is the outcome of the battle over the survival of the now deposed yet independent judiciary. The President's own political future is linked to the election outcome. Unlike General Yahya Khan who must be given the credit for conducting the fairest elections in Pakistan's history in 1970 during Emergency, President Musharraf is man in a different context. Yahya had no political party, no personal political stake and no foreign supporters to contend with. Yahya also had no record of eight-year rule or of an onward political journey to protect. By contrast, General retired Musharraf has his presidency to legitimise, his second coup dÂ’etat to condone, his dismantling of the judiciary to justify. Maybe, as he and his supporters argue, it is all for Pakistan's good, but still the fact is that the he would have a strong compulsion to ensure an electoral win for his own supporters.
Then there is the election process and its problems. A flawed election process with weak mechanics that make it vulnerable to manipulation, the danger of rigging is 'clear and present.' It is ironical that at a time of acute internal political polarization and unprecedented internal security challenges, the exercise of seeking the votersÂ’ verdict is likely to be flawed. Such a flawed election will create further chaos. The new factor in the post March situation is the inability of the State or its political allies to use its coercive force to politically sustain a non-credible situation, which violates legal and Constitutional principles.
Election 2008 promises to be an unusually skewed affair with the absence of a level playing field for the Opposition. The manner in which the Sindh and the Punjab governments have used State resources to promote the parties supported by the President is too blatant to be missed. President Musharraf recently stated in a CNN interview that he was not favouring any party. That is hard to believe. Everyone familiar with the realities of Pakistan's current political scene knows that PML-Q is the King's party. Even though the President now sees that support for the King's party is evaporating, there is no denying that in Sindh and Punjab, the parties he supports established tight controls over the entire bureaucratic machinery, which will be a key factor in the election process.
There is fear of rigging on the Election Day itself whether by harassing opponents, picking them up two days before the elections, or manipulating the count or the results. The role of the Nazims at the district level will work against the opposition; the Elections Commissions orders that Nazims cannot participate in the campaigning are being flouted with impunity.
Whatever its mandate and whatever the intentions of the senior officials of the Election Commission, it has neither been able to take action against those violating the rights of aspiring candidates or right the wrongs committed by its own officials. For example, the rejection of Shahbaz Sharif's nomination papers by the Election Commission has been questioned by the candidate. He has given solid evidence that each of the three charges against him used as justification for rejecting his papers cannot stand on legal or Constitutional grounds. Yet there is no action taken by the EC on the Shahbaz Sharif case.
Similarly, the very specific incident involving the arrest of PPP candidate Sarfraz Bugti reportedly by Military Intelligence on November 22 preventing him from filing his nomination papers for the provincial assembly seat in Baluchistan was reported to the Election Commission. The EC was informed by Sarfraz's father Ghulam Qadir Bugti that when he sent his other son Jan Mohammad Bugti to file nomination papers for both the NA and a PA seat his nomination papers for the PA seat were torn by individuals standing outside the office where he went to file his papers. There has been no follow up to the letter that the EC wrote to the Chief Secretary of Baluchistan. Indeed the Election Commission is neither autonomous nor powerful. It does not have the authority or the administrative mechanisms to implement its own orders. Holding the powerful provincial Chief Secretaries accountable is far beyond the EC capacity and authority.
It is with fatalist sadness that the people of Pakistan put up with the antics of Musharraf but they know that such skewed elections will not usher an era of political stability.