...where my two conflicting personalities unite...

The Ways Of The Tongue…

Friday, April 25th, 2008

Two days ago, my aunt and cousins came over to my house for my sister’s birthday. When it was all over, I drove them back home.

On the way back, one of my cousins was talking to me about Eid-ul-Azha and goats and cows, “…I’m thinking about getting a goat this Eid…blah…not a cow…blah…not healthy…blah…too expensive…blah…you know, camel farting.”

Camel Farting?“, I asked.

“Oh, sorry, sorry, Cattle Farming!”, he replied.

*****

Reminds of the days at the end of September when the presidential nomination forms were being submitted to the Election Commission of Pakistan and Mr. Hamid Mir on Geo TV’s Capital Talk had a tongue slip. That day, lawyers had been protesting in all cities. Suddenly it was reported that the legs of the President of Peshawar High Court Bar Association had been broken by the police. Moreover, it was stated that it had happened because a Police armored car had run him over.

There were different guests on Capital Talk that day and one of them was obviously from PML-Q.Hamid Mir asked the guest, “The Prime Minister [Shaukat Aziz] has said that this day has been peaceful. Doesn’t he know that the PHCBA’s President’s legs have been broken?”

The guest replied, “He must not have heard about it yet!”

Hamid Mir: “So you’re saying our PM is unaware?”

Grabbing any moment to splash dirt on the face of a Pro-Musharraf guy, Hamid Mir quickly scored.

The next day I picked up Jang to find out more about this incident. Surprisingly, I found no reference to the PHCBA President in any of the papers, let alone his legs. I turned on the news but still couldn’t find such a report. No channel reported such an event, not even Hamid Mir’s own Geo News. It turned out that Mr. Hamid Mir, engulfed in the habit of ‘reporting it first’, had been the one who was actually unaware and had been dishonoring the PM from misinformation.

Moreover, the actual event had been that lawyers had set fire to that armored car and when the people in that armored car tried to escape to save their lives by driving it away, some lawyers got hurt.

*****

Yeah, I know I turned a family post into a political one but what the hell, when almost every blog is filled with political posts, why can’t I post a few? All the constant bickering about how the CJ is an angel from god here to save democracy really ticks me off and makes me want to do something about it.

Pakistan: Big Nation, Small Leaders

Thursday, April 24th, 2008

Standing next to Pakistan’s rising geopolitical challenges, most Pakistani politicians appear pygmies. The federal sports minister boycotts the Olympic torch relay in Islamabad because he hates Musharraf. The new prime minister chooses the same ceremony to lecture on democracy. The Pakistani military is condemned for executing coups. But no one is bothered when ambitious judges want the judiciary to do the same. Anyone who believes this is an epical battle for good-versus-evil needs to take a good hard look at doomsday video games, the last bastion for such epics.

By AHMED QURAISHI

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan – Standing next to Pakistan’s rising geopolitical challenges, most Pakistani politicians appear pygmies. Take the federal minister for sports, for example. China overrides opposition in international circles to letting the Olympic torch pass through our country. Yet the honorable minister refuses to receive the torch because he hates the president.

Now, our president, Mr. Musharraf, plays a deft hand in the Great Game by inviting the Shanghai Cooperation Organization [read: China and Russia] into Afghanistan to break NATO’s monopoly. Yet our honorable Prime Minister picks the torch relay ceremony –China’s most important news event of the day— as a venue to remind ‘everyone’ [read: Musharraf] that the new ‘democratic’ government will have the upper hand even in sports. One Chinese translator appeared confused at how to make this relevant to the officials who came down from Beijing. Hopefully the translators did not consider this equivalent to rubbing salt. They’ve already heard enough ‘democratic’ sermons from the Americans.

It is admirable that Mr. Shahbaz Sharif personally visited the family of the poor man in Lahore killed earlier in police custody. But how to explain the absence of rationality in the first action of Punjab’s stopgap new chief minister who announced he was turning his own secretariat building, built by his predecessor, into a university? The building housed offices previously scattered all over the expanding metropolis. Isn’t this blind political revenge? Punjab’s new administration would have scored some badly needed points for civilized politics in this country had it said something nice about at least one good thing that Punjab’s former chief minister did, like launching Rescue 1122.

But the biggest failures of reason, civility and common sense continue to be reserved for the ‘judicial issue’. Anyone who believes this is some kind of an epical battle for good-versus-evil needs to take a good hard look at doomsday video games, the last bastion for such epics.

Mr. Aitzaz Ahsan hijacked the genuine activism of the legal community for political gains that squarely benefited political parties. Narrow politics took over when Mr. Ahsan decided to keep one feet in the lawyers’ movement and the other one firmly entrenched with political parties. He then smartly used one against the other. So if he doesn’t get a ticket for a by-election from PPP, he can always count on PML-N.

Now he wants both feet firmly in politics, effectively jumping the lawyers’ ship. He wants to join a parliament whose boycott he championed. If Mr. Ahsan’s position is right and ethical, how come Imran Khan, the APDM, and the rest of the boycotters are not following Mr. Ahsan’s lead?

The real lawyers –those who are not politicians— have belatedly woken up to this reality, when the movement has effectively become subservient to the usual dirty politics. One party used the movement to extract a better ‘deal’. Another party is using it to get back at the president.

No wonder the former presidential candidate, retired justice Wajihuddin, is taking swipes at the politicians in power. Another lawyer, Mr. Ali Kurd, reminds the politicians they are back in power thanks to the lawyers’ movement. But, more ominously, both are warning that parliament’s authority will be challenged in the streets if demands were not met.

This is like having the judiciary – and not the military – execute a coup, for a change. We are obviously taking British democracy a step further.

The lawyers’ movement would have gained unquestionable credibility had former chief justice Iftikhar Chaudhry ensured that the movement remained de-politicized. To prove it, his angry speeches should have mentioned, in addition to President Musharraf, political parties that continue to have in their ranks major offenders of the law and people who created a worldwide precedent by mobbing the building of the Supreme Court of Pakistan. Surely this last offense was as ugly as dismissing sitting judges, if not uglier.

So, good-versus-evil? Revenge and politics are more like it. If this was about democracy, Justice Chaudhry would have been the first one to step down for taking oath from a military chief executive and abandoning his colleagues of October 1999, who quietly faded into oblivion.

As Pakistani citizens, we need to ask more probing questions than the clichéd ones that less than 30 liberal television commentators are recycling on different networks and posing them to us as ultimate truths.

And, please, if someone dares talk openly, do not be quick to link them to the Presidency. Last week, one of the several published letters to the editor on the next page even suggested that this newspaper should fire me. Another reader sarcastically volunteered to find me a new job: as deputy press secretary to the president. I am all for investigating my links to the Presidency, both direct and indirect, because I really don’t have any. But I have political opinions and some of them are approving of the president. I know Mr. Ayaz Amir and Mr. Shafqat Mahmood, both columnists, have strong views favorable to PPP and PML-N. Should they also be investigated for their apparent bias?

Trading ideas is far better than trading accusations.

© Copyrighted Material. The News International & AhmedQuraishi.com.

Pakistan: It’s Revenge, Not Democracy

Wednesday, April 23rd, 2008

Pakistan’s military and people cannot and should not allow democracy to turn into chaos. The issue of the restoration of the former chief justice is a farce that needs to be stopped. The return of a group of biased, politicized and vengeful judges is not necessary unless the only thing on the minds of the advocates of this option is exacting political revenge from President Pervez Musharraf. The ball is with the politicians. Let’s hope that sanity prevails.

By AHMED QURAISHI

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan – In Pakistan, return to democracy is threatened by a return to chaos. Revenge is apparently the first order of business for some of the new winners in the election. Frivolous confrontation is not in Pakistan’s national interest. Remember: At present, Pakistan can afford a flawed political system, but not a weak one.

The issue of the restoration of the former chief justice is a farce that needs to be stopped. There are many ways to ensure a future independent judiciary in Pakistan. But the return of a group of biased, politicized and vengeful judges is not necessary unless the only thing on the minds of the advocates of this option is exacting political revenge from President Pervez Musharraf.

If this election was about restoring the deposed judges, how come an overwhelming majority of Pakistanis ignored the strong appeals by Mr. Aitzaz Ahsan and Mr. Imran Khan to boycott the poll?

It is unbelievable how the two gentlemen, who opted to stay out of the political process for the next five years, are now doing everything possible to hijack the mandate of those politicians who ignored those silly boycott calls and participated in the election and chose to be part of the process. Shouldn’t the media question why Mr. Ahsan and Mr. Imran are claiming more political space for themselves than their due share?

Is it healthy for a fledgling Pakistani democracy to allow lawyers and judges to take precedence over the Parliament? Who will decide in the future how our democracy will run: the Parliament or the judges? In their blind political hatred, some of our politicians are committing a mistake that will haunt them in the future.

There is no question that the scenes of police mistreatment of Mr. Iftikhar Chaudhry on Mar. 9, 2007, were unacceptable for all of us. But turning him into a democratic hero is an insult to any thinking person.

His resounding ‘No’ on that day has been overly romanticized by his supporters as a case of one man standing up to powerful military generals. This romanticism was the work of left-wingers in our media and politics whose worldview is shaped by the struggles of the past century.

Mr. Chaudhry stood up for nobody but his job. The man put up an impressive fight for his job. Aitzaz Ahsan’s jump into the fray was the calculated move of a politician and not a lawyer. The judge was up against Mr. Musharraf and that was good reason to support him. That’s politics.

Never in his career did Mr. Iftikhar Chaudhry ever claim a fight for judiciary or for democracy. And if he did, he certainly relinquished that claim the day he agreed to take oath from a military regime and ditched his colleagues who resigned on principle after the military coup.

There is also no question that Mr. Chaudhry is tainted beyond repair. After his reinstatement on July 20th, he received a second chance to prove that his was a fight for principles. Instead, he did everything possible to leave no doubt that he was biased, politicized, and vengeful. He led the judiciary to a near civil war with important pillars of the Pakistani state. That was a unique precedent even by the standards of the world’s oldest democracies.

What is worse than advocating the return of the politicized judges is to see some politicians hiding behind this issue to avoid the real problems facing the Pakistani nation. It will be a tragedy if the opportunity of the fairest election in Pakistani history is squandered on revenge politics, which is exactly where things appear to be headed if cooler minds don’t prevail soon.

No one should say this is what we want the Pakistani democracy to look like. We deserve better, more refined standards. A new Pakistani political culture would mean that some of the tried, tested and failed politicians be recognized and be given a second chance, or a third chance to be more accurate. It would also mean that some of the vengeful politicians recognize President Musharraf in his new role. He should not be judged on the events of the past one year. Mr. Musharraf has contributed in good faith to Pakistan’s rise over the past five years. And his presidency can stabilize the transition to civilian democracy in a country where military input in policy cannot – and should not – be ignored.

The consequences of an unnecessary and an unavoidable confrontation do no bode well for Pakistan’s interests in the region and the world. We need to prop up a strong Pakistani state. And we need to do this sooner than later. In our haste for real democracy, we need to ensure that it does not descent into chaos. And the first step is to immediately end this dangerous slide into revenge politics.

At this stage in Pakistan’s democratic evolution, democracy is needed to strengthen the Pakistani system, not weaken it. We don’t have the luxury of a long, overdrawn process with many hiccups. The time for those experiments was the 20th century. And we wasted it. Now we need to get our act together. The Pakistani military is on board. President Musharraf has said he has no problems and is willing to work with everyone. The ball is with the politicians. Let’s hope that sanity prevails.

© Copyrighted Material. The News International & AhmedQuraishi.com.

Height of Stupidity on 9th Avenue, Islamabad

Wednesday, April 23rd, 2008

Chaudhry Iftikhar’s Fascist Court

Monday, April 21st, 2008

“All over the world, members of the judiciary think twice before encroaching on the powers of the government. In Pakistan’s case, judicial activism became a case of overreach. It was practically a coup. The ex-chief of the Supreme Court saw no limits to his authority. His ‘road-show campaign’ had definitely taken on the feel of a political movement. And instead of keeping a distance from the political parties, he used their help and funds for his restoration drive.”

By NOSHEEN SAEED

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan – “Freedom cannot exist without discipline, self-discipline, and rights cannot exist without duties. Those who do not observe their duties do not deserve their rights.” – Oriana Fallaci

All over the world constitutions are drafted for the sole reason of balancing power between various competing forces. Constitutions alone do not guarantee peace and stability.

The constitution clearly demarches the powers of the three organs; the legislature makes the laws, the executive enforces them and the judiciary interprets them. For all three to function harmoniously its imperative not to breach the thin line that divides their respective roles.

All over the world, interventions by the judiciary in issues that come under the exclusive domain of the executive are always handled with restraint.

In Pakistan’s case judicial activism to review executive decisions became a case of overreach. It was practically a takeover of the functions of the other organs. The branch of government charged with maintaining the sanctity of the Constitution no longer felt bound by the constraints of that same Constitution.

The Supreme Court judges recognized no limits on their authority; they were legislating relentlessly passing orders in the nature of legislation against government decisions and embarrassing the government especially its intelligence agencies by holding them accountable for actions that were beyond the reach of law and of national security.

When the “guardians of the constitution” start summoning government officials, chiefs of the intelligence agencies, start delivering punishments to police officials for merely doing their duty and humiliating senior officials for following the orders of the executive, in doing so the honorable judges were transgressing the jurisdiction laid down in the constitution.

The question then posed was who will guard the guardians? Secondly, judges are supposed to speak through their judgments when sitting in court and if they make statements which have populist tenor then they send wrong signals which raise tensions causing problems. Thirdly when issues of such emergency as the election of the President and his eligibility is under debate and the issue is of urgency, instead of deciding the case promptly if the court takes it leisurely, it again sends wrong indications, raising doubts and distrust between the judiciary and the executive. As a result of such actions the confrontation between the two becomes inevitable and the outcome is what we have seen happen in the county– a predictable confrontation.

Perhaps the most damaging aspect of the confrontation was that by watching the steady erosion of government by the consent of an “imperial judiciary”, society had broken down to the point where ordinary citizens decided to take law into their own hands and were emboldened to the extent of challenging the writ of the state.

Even lawbreakers thought they had stopped living in a nation of laws, and instead had ended up in a rule with no center of authority left and relief could be obtained in the name of public spirited litigation from the courts only.

Resultantly, the Supreme Court was flooded with writs challenging the government and seeking assistance from the courts, making the functions of the other pillars of the state utterly superfluous. Lack of confidence in the government and rising expectations from the judiciary exclusively led to political instability, polarization, economic destabilization and break down of law and order within the country, paving the way for violence, extremism, terrorism and anarchy to thrive in society.

PPP Co-chairman Asif Zardari has rightly remarked that Justice Chaudhry had politicized himself overtly and ruined his case as an advocate for an independent judiciary.

The deposed C J became a highly controversial figure as he toured the country to influence public opinion. His “road show campaign” had definitely taken on the feel of a political movement and instead of keeping a distance from the political parties he used their help and funds for his restoration drive. Saad Rafique has been awarded a ministry by Nawaz for assembling the crowds for Justice Chaudhry’s reception in Lahore.

Justice Chaudhry fell from grace when people heard lawyers using derogatory language against state institutions and he never once discouraged the lawyers from doing so.

When various bar councils canceled memberships of hundreds of lawyers for supporting the government’s views; when verbal and physical abuse of eminent lawyers like Naeem Bokhari, Waseem Sajjad, Khalid Ranja and spraying black paint on Ahmad Raza Kasuri’s face was highlighted; when the lawyers were unfolding their never ending agendas one after another and openly challenging the government, Justice Chaudhry considered such hooliganism “rule of law” and remained a silent spectator.

Unfortunately Justice Chaudhry remained anti-establishment and turned into a focal point for the opposition to Gen. Musharraf. Justice Chaudhry continued to play this role even after the Supreme Court gave him back his job on 20th July 2007. He was still out to settle scores in spite of the fact that the government with grace and dignity had accepted the Supreme Court’s decision of throwing out the Presidential reference.

It was time for Justice Chaudhry to show magnanimity of heart by remaining “impartial” for the larger interest of the country. Yet the PCO-ed Judge who earlier showed few signs of breaking with traditions or an independent streak and participated in Supreme Court sessions between 2000 and 2005 that validated Musharraf’s military takeover, the legal framework for his rule, and a constitutional amendment that gave Musharraf added powers and allowed him to keep his hold over the Army was out to not only dismiss General Musharraf “unceremoniously” but to also discredit the prestigious institution of Armed Forces by dismissing their Chief brusquely, not realizing that his move would have been disastrous, plunging the country into complete chaos, carnage and even civil war. There might have been another martial law and elections would have been light years away.

Just recently the former Chief Justice could not resist being led by lawyers supporting his reinstatement to the residence of a political figure, Mr. Asif Zardari, ignoring the code of conduct of judges and the supremacy of the parliament which has asked for a month’s time to solve the issue of the deposed judges.

By no standards can Justice Chaudhry be called an independent judge. In fact it won’t be wrong to say he has become a “string-puppet” in the hands of ambitious lawyers motivated by political aspirations of their own, who feel that lawyers alone can save the country by taking a lead role because people have lost faith in politics and politicians.

© Copyrighted Material. AhmedQuraishi.com.