Friday, September 20, 2024

Pakistan- A Nation in Quest of Stability

With its waning social gauge, degenerating economy, dividing society on ethnic, sectarian bases and the government’s mislaid priorities, Pakistan is emerging as a disturbed state. Institutions like independent judiciary, strong vibrant civil society and moderate-thinking Pakistanis are delaying its fatal decline. Pakistan as a state is weakening but the Pakistani society is strengthening with every passing day. If state has failed to counter insurgency, terrorism, extremism, intolerance, ethnic and sectarian divide, alleviation of poverty, the society has made itself indifferent of such monsters from its growth. Both are working in isolation. However, this indifference is making Pakistan more feeble and society more artificial.

Who hurt the state? All. General KM Arif in his latest book says: “Pakistan is a wounded nation, hurt by both friends and foes. Her national body is riddled with injuries of insult, neglect and arrogance inflicted by dictators and democrats; judges and generals, the bureaucrats and media. None of them are blame-free”. On international scene, she has been badly treated by its friends, situated thousands of miles from Islamabad. Pakistan has been more harmed by its allies than by its enemies in the name of Cold War, Détente, and the War on Terror, to name a few.

The power corridors believe in guided democracy with a byproduct of political stability. Had it been vice versa, Pakistan history would have been based on strong pillars of tested democracy mustered by political constancy. Transformation for economic growth, national security, and Islamization were given precedence in the past and every effort was made to bring out a concrete shift from the past to present. It was a superficial change which resulted in eroding of civilian and democratic institutions that took the country more in deep troubles. Enlightened moderation with selected accountability was also tried. But by now, larger population of the country has turned extremist kudos to the CIA’s war against Soviet Union in Afghanistan and drone strikes in the tribal areas of Pakistan. this resulted in a permanent threat to democracy and challenged faint political stability which always seems to breath its last.

With every change of government, a new set of politicians rise to prominence with old slogan of giving birth to a new Pakistan. Ayub Khan tried to be the rebirth of Jinnah. Bhutto was the second most popular politician after Jinnah. General Zia was ‘the Mard-e-Momin Mard-e-Haq’. Benazir was ‘Mohtarma Fatima Jinnah’, the sister of Quaid-e-Azam. Similarly, Musharraf wanted to bring a new generation of competent politicians to power by putting electoral bars on old politicians and by introducing a new local government system. However, none of all realized that the success of democracy is to give more time to democracy for its nurture and maturity. Adopting names do not change disposition of a person. A crow sitting on a hill-top can’t become an eagle.

In a democratic setup, politicians make mistakes and learn from them in the long run. Today, PM Nawaz Sharif and his governing team is more mature than twelve years back. Had their government not been overthrown in 1999, they would have been more mature and competent than today. Failure of democracy brings technocrats in power. But politics is to politicians and not to technocrats. Non-elected can’t be equated with the elected ones. In the past 65 years of Pakistan’s history, the only thing we have failed to understand is to differentiate between the servants of the nation and representatives of the people. Representatives serve the nation with the help and assistance of servants. We deserve more wisdom to know the difference.

Pakistan would be a stable state with conducive and permanent relationship between the Centre and the Provinces. A democratic reform strategy is based on equitable and balanced distribution of powers and resources between the centre and provinces. During military rule in Pakistan, provinces always cry for their rights and thus result in centrifugal forces. However, in a democratic setup, provinces are satisfied with their due share granted to them with mutual consent. 18th amendment provided provinces their due right. Fiscal and administrative powers were devolved to federating units and hence, all of the four are moving in a harmony and with their support, a strong federation is working in Pakistan. Keeping in view Baluchistan situation, military operations in Waziristan and the TTP insurgent movements in other parts of the country, any blow to 18th amendment would result in a huge shake of the nation for which it is absolutely not ready. This means stability grows from below- from districts to provinces and from provinces to the federation.

Rulers of Pakistan always idealize vision of the country in shape of compassionate slogans like “Saab Se Pehlay Pakistan”, “Politics of Reconciliation”, “Real Democracy”, “Nizam-e- Mustafa”, “Basic Democracy” and “Naya Pakistan”. But they are neither good strategists nor good implementers. They always have permissive or lax attitude towards result-oriented projects. They talk more and act less. Their short-sightedness is costing the nation immensely. Had they been far-sighted, we would have had a successful negotiation round with the Tehreek-e-Taliban-e- Pakistan (TTP), we would have a friendly Afghanistan, we would have a motorway and bullet-train from Peshawar to Karachi, we would have a strong economy based on friendly ties with IMF and the World Bank, we would have had very friendly and sincere ties with the US, we would have won the War on Terror (rather the war on terror would not have started in the first place), we would not have been deceived by our allies during the War on Terror, and over and above, we would have a stable and secure Pakistan for the Pakistanis.

Violence is another mean of damaging a country’s security and stability. Pakistan is eroded by its domestic cancer- “Sectarian, ethnic and regional violence”. With every passing day, their death squads intensify their war against their opponents. Most of them are fighting a proxy war on behalf of other hostile countries to harm Pakistan. A country in chaos, economic stagnation, high rate of growing poverty, bad governance, unequal distribution of wealth between haves and have-nots, lavish style of government and its functionaries produce frustration amongst the common man. Thus a foreign funding to any small group to play a subversive role in Pakistan makes a huge dent in country’s security. A group of deprived people, starved with basic necessities of life, after receiving foreign funding, at once consider themselves as ‘the Mujahid of Islam”, or “Anti-Americanism” and wage a jihad against the “stooges of the West” and “usurpers of the rights of underprivileged”. Organized violence, including suicide attacks, can never bring any change in foreseeable future of Pakistan. Every militant organization has to change its discourse and disposition from militancy to political entity. This is the way to their success. By acquiring power through electoral and democratic means, their agenda, appreciated and recommended by the majority of the populace, will be implemented through democratic means. This will give not only permanence to their entity but would also reduce a sense of threat to the people of Pakistan and further would give a sense of permanence to stability and security of the country without damaging it.

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