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Changes Ahead for Pakistan?

General Pervez Musharraf was the fourth army chief to do away with an elected government exactly three years ago

By Asif Farooqi, IOL Pakistan correspondent

ISLAMABAD, October 9 (IslamOnline) - Pakistan goes to the polls here Thursday, October 10, to elect a government to end three years of military rule.

Out of over 144 million, nearly half of Pakistanis are able to use their right to vote to elect 272 members for the national assembly and 577 members for the provincial assemblies. Elected members of the National Assembly then will elect a Prime Minister to rule the country for the next five years.

But never in the history of Pakistan has an elected government survived its full term in office. Every time the elected government is dismissed, either by the president or by a military intervention.

It was only Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto who, in 1977 announced pre-mature elections when one year of his term still remained. The rest of the country’s political history is marred by military interventions.

Almost half the time since the independence in 1947, army chiefs have ruled Pakistan. In 1958 when General Ayub Khan dismissed a democracy for martial law. Then General Pervez Musharraf was the fourth army chief to do away with an elected government exactly three years ago.

The National Security Council can check working of the parliament, with powers to dismiss the government and the parliament back in the President’s hands. Thus, the elected prime minister would have very little maneuvering space as far as policy making issues are concerned.

President Musharraf has time and again made it clear that he will not allow the elected government to do anything against the national interest. And in the absence of a clear definition of this so-called “national interest” the future prime minister can be sacked for any reason.

With the constitutional package intact and a very strong set of policy covering almost every aspect of government, the new government will not be able to rule freely. And anyone trying to reverse the amendments or policies carefully derived in the last three years will face the consequences.

“I will see then whether they survive or me” was the answer from the General when he was asked in a press conference announcing the new constitutional amendments regarding what would happen if the new parliament tried to reverse these constitutional amendments.

“Not much will change in any case” is what the International Crisis Group, a think-tank on the security issues based in Islamabad thinks of the impact the new government may have on the local and regional horizon. This feeling is also very popular amongst the public. A large number of people think this election will not change much.

Other factors can also be discussed but this is the prime reason why Pakistanis have taken so little interest in the election campaigns run by different political parties and candidates. Unlike the past, life goes on as normal. The traditional fervor of an election campaign is absent.

The results are almost predictable. Absence of genuinity from these elections is evident from the fact that these are the most predictable elections in the history of Pakistan. Even the outlook of the future parliament and the party position is being discussed with a lot of authority by the political workers and leaders and journalists.

A strange phenomenon has struck these elections. A batch of 95 independent candidates has come up contesting with one symbol, the crescent. The fact that some of the heavyweight politicians have opted this symbol has raised many eyebrows.

This is not seen only as a coincidence that many relatives of army generals and some pro-Musharraf senior politicians are contesting under this symbol. Political pundits foresee these independents as a decisive force in the parliament when a prime ministerial vote takes place.

The newspapers, veteran political leaders and political pundits are predicting a hung parliament with majority of seats (110 plus) going to the King’s party followed by 60 odd seats for the PPP and around 30 for the PML (N). The U.S. bombings on Afghanistan are likely to benefit of the religious parties expected to be at their best in these elections with as many as 30 seats.

Results can be embarrassing for General Musharraf in terms of voter’s turnout. Pakistanis have never been enthusiastic voters. On the average in the last five ballots, 43 per cent of Pakistanis came out to vote on a polling day.

In the last elections in 1997, this ratio was less than 37 per cent. This time it is expected to be worse than that.

As President Musharraf has flouted the elections in Indian held Kashmir, on the basis of low turnout, he faces the same risk in case the voter’s turnout on October 10 is anywhere less than 30 per cent. 

 

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