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Home Editorials

Ironies Of Liberation

Najam Sethi by Najam Sethi
October 31, 2022
in Editor's Picks, Editorials, Main Slider
Najam Sethi Ironies Of Liberation
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Will November prove to be the cruelest month of all? It all depends on the answers to some burning questions. Will the COAS, General Qamar Javed Bajwa, go home on 29thNovember, 2022, as he has pledged several times, or will some extraordinary development “compel” him to stay on? Will Imran Khan’s long march of thousands end with a whimper or a bang (literally)? Will Imran Khan and Shehbaz Sharif enter into negotiations to end civil strife by setting a mutually acceptable date for the next general elections? What role will the Chief Justice of Pakistan (CJP), Umar Bandial, play in mediating or exacerbating political conflict?

​With less than one month to go, General Bajwa’s departure is clouded by the reluctance of the PDM government to announce his successor. Just as rumours abounded earlier about Imran Khan’s offer of an extension to the COAS in exchange for help in defeating the vote of no-confidence against him launched by the opposition in March – now proven true – it is no secret that the PDM leadership would like to scratch his back in exchange for help in warding off the looming threat from the PTI. Even Imran Khan has suggested that if the PDM government can be packed off this month and caretakers installed, General Bajwa may stay on as COAS until after the elections have returned a new government to office. Thus, despite his avowed “apolitical” stance, if push comes to shove during the PTI’s long march, it is not inconceivable that General Bajwa may be “compelled” to step in, pry apart the two warring sides, knock some sense into them and gain an extension in tenure by virtue of his “good deed”. That would open the door to an early election rather than a late one. Under the circumstances, CJP Bandial might see the wisdom of approving another extension for General Bajwa until a new government is installed after the elections.

​Much will therefore depend on how Imran Khan’s long march pans out in the next week or two. It has begun on a soft note, partly because Imran knows that, after the DGISI’s unprecedented public intervention, the Miltablishment could take off its gloves if he crosses their red lines again, and partly because he is still hoping that the PDM government will succumb to the threat of violence and open the door to negotiations that fulfil his objectives. Both sides are propagating their intent to fight despite admitting pressure to talk.

Significantly, too, both parties are begging CJP Bandial to take their side. Imran Khan wants to march and the PDM government wants to stop him in his tracks. Khan insists his marchers will remain peaceful but Rana Sanaullah, the interior minister, has offered evidence of the PTI’s intentions to incite violence. The CJP says that the PTI has a right to march but notes his power to stop it at any time. Meanwhile, the good judge is exploiting this opportunity to browbeat the government and pack the court with handpicked junior judges. The threat of blocking the acquittal of Maryam Nawaz and outlawing the amended NAB law that has reprieved the top leaders of the PDM has sent the government scurrying for compromise, even to the extent of sacrificing its law minister, Azam Tarar, who was compelled to vote in favour of CJP Bandial’s nominees in the Judicial Commission against the interests of the bar which he has long represented.

Another struggle is manifestly unfolding in the background. At least five top generals are vying for the top slot in the army on November 29th when General Bajwa is scheduled to doff his uniform. If he doesn’t do so because of some extraordinary development, they will all go home before he does. So they have a vested interest in forestalling violent conflict, keeping Imran Khan at bay and showing their chief to the door.

It is a perverse comment on the state of Pakistan that the two institutions that are supposed to be “politically neutral” – the army and the judiciary – have become the most intrusive and controversial. Worse, their heads are flaunting their unaccountable powers and prejudices without restraint.

​The double irony built into the situation should not be lost on us, too.

Even as the army high command is insisting that it has become apolitical and neutral and intends to stay that way in the future, both the PTI and PDM are knocking on its door for salvation. The former is threatening them and the latter is cajoling them. Under the circumstances, the probability is that the generals will not shy away from upholding the “national interest” when the state is threatened by instability and destabilization in the face of financial bankruptcy, as always.

The other irony lies in the nature of the unprecedented popular attack on the army’s political interventionism launched by Imran Khan. In normal circumstances, this would be viewed as a belated but welcome development to strengthen constitutional democracy. Indeed, this is the common thread running through the long struggles of liberals, leftists, democrats, human and women’s rights groups and ethnic/sub-nationalist, religious minorities on the periphery. The problem has arisen because the current struggle for “real liberation” led by the PTI is not aimed at defanging the army to strengthen multi-party constitutional democracy but at sharpening its claws to clamp down on the PTI’s political opponents to entrench populist one party fascism.

Not so long ago, the people of Pakistan passionately backed the Lawyers Movement for Independence of the Judiciary as  a veritable “revolution” in the offing. A decade later, we have been lumped with the most unaccountable and politically biased judiciary in history as exemplified by the likes of ex-CJPs Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry, Saqib Nisar and Asif Khosa. Today, we are in the throes of another such populist upsurge against another repressive state institution that threatens to further enslave us instead of liberating us.

Also Read:

Tackling Pakistan’s Polycrisis Requires Clarity And Consensus. Both Are Missing.

Polarization In Broadcast Media Eroding Credibility

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Najam Sethi

Najam Sethi

Najam Aziz Sethi is a Pakistani journalist, businessman who is also the founder of The Friday Times and Vanguard Books. Previously, as an administrator, he served as Chairman of Pakistan Cricket Board, caretaker Federal Minister of Pakistan and Chief Minister of Punjab, Pakistan.

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Comments 5

  1. Ashfaq Khan says:
    3 months ago

    I have the following objection to the basic premise of this excellent piece…
    In the end, it wont be the army who would be ‘putting some sense’ into PTI & PDM if it comes to blows…
    Judging from the way things are going, it would be PDM who would be negotiating peace between PTI & army.
    PDM has nothing to lose now. It betted its credibility on economic turn around and lost and also got discredited by throwing aside Vote Ko Izzat do narrative. Shahbaz, Imran 2.0, might suffer but PDM would win of IK is put back kn throne roght now.

  2. Rawman says:
    3 months ago

    Auto-immune disease causes the immune system to attack your own body cells, and in the outcome leaves the body considerably weakened with irreparable damage.

    In Imran Khan Pakistan has got an auto-immune disease. There is only one solution:
    a) the organs of the state should stand up for the country and its people, and
    b) PDM should find enough strength to stand up and be counted.

    There is no other solution.

  3. Khurram Ayub says:
    3 months ago

    It’s known that people who are raised in captivity develop an emotional dependence towards the transgressors, referred to as Stockholm syndrome.

    If we look at cause and effect we can see that formation commanders convention generated a paradigm shift to free the captives. That led to a political turmoil but it will take sometime for captives to get over this syndrome.

    Our military just needs to hold its nerve in the interest of the nation. I would say better late than never and let bygones be bygones.

  4. Mohummud Idrees says:
    3 months ago

    Revolutions regenerate the stagnant even putrid societies and nations. Pakistan has been submerged in such state since that moron Hypocrite Ziaul naHaq’s time. Stalemate in all fields and a strategic lack of progress in important fields of education, health, industry, agriculture and social development. And of course the prevalent delayed and absence of justice makes everything worse. Pakistan needs total transformation through a proper reformation. And Revolution is the Key. The retards wish to prevent it because it hurts their entrenched interests. But without it, Pakistan will be a 3rd class nation in perpetuity. Now is its chance to redeem itself, to actually reclaim its lost moorings. Imran is the man of character and will. Let’s support him so that compromises which kill transformations are prevented from occurring. May Pakistan inculcate and actualise the ideals of the Quaid and Allama.

  5. Seng Kally says:
    3 months ago

    Well orchestrated political stunt, just to prove Might is Right by Imran Khan. Institutions have to exercise their solemn duty towards sovereign state to save the nation & call off the bluff of this egoistic PTI Chief….!!!! 75 years is a long time, country should be mature enough to understand the mess it is in…..!!!!

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