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Pakistan:
A Political History Based on Ayesha Jalal for for
the Encyclopedia of Asian History, adapted by Amanda Snellinger for
AskAsia. © Asia Society. From The Encyclopedia of Asian History.
Asia Society and Charles Scribner's Sons. http://www.askasia.org/teachers/Instructional_Resources/Materials/Readings/India/R_india_11.htm |
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Pakistan's short
history as a country has been very turbulent. Fighting among the provinces
as well as full-fledged wars with India prevented Pakistan from gaining
real stability in the last five decades. It oscillates between military
rule and democratically elected governments, between secular policies and
financial backing as a "frontline" state during the Cold War. In 1998, Pakistan's
government jolted the world when it announced that it tested five nuclear
warheads following India's own test. The United States imposed severe
sanctions on Pakistan and India. In late September 2001, following the
terrorist attacks on the United States, the sanctions were lifted in an
effort to gain Pakistan's favor in having Afghanistan extradite terrorist
Osama bin Laden, who was believed to be behind the World Trade Center and
Pentagon attacks. Some Pakistanis believe that the lifting of U.S.
sanctions would not usher any economic prosperity but rather bring
disaster because we are pitting "brother to fight against his own brother
in Afghanistan." Only the perspective of time will tell. Overview Scarred from birth,
Pakistan's quest for survival has been as compelling as it has been
uncertain. Despite the shared religion of its overwhelmingly Muslim
population, Pakistan has been engaged in a precarious struggle to define a
national identity and evolve a political system for its linguistically
diverse population. Pakistan is known to have over twenty languages and
over 300 distinct dialects, Urdu and English are the official languages
but Punjabi, Sindhi, Pashtu, Baluchi and Seraiki are considered main
languages. This diversity has caused chronic regional tensions and
successive failures in forming a constitution. Pakistan has also been
burdened by full-scale wars with India, a strategically exposed
northwestern frontier, and series of economic crises. It has difficulty
allocating its scarce economic and natural resources in an equitable
manner. All of Pakistan's
struggles underpin the dilemma they face in reconciling the goal of
national integration with the imperatives of national security.
Following a military
defeat at the hands of India the breakaway of its eastern territory, which
India divides it from, caused the establishment of Bangladesh in 1971.
This situation epitomizes the most dramatic manifestation of Pakistan's
dilemma as a decentralized nation. Political developments in Pakistan
continue to be marred by provincial jealousies and, in particular, by the
deep resentments in the smaller provinces of Sind, Baluchistan, and the
North-West Frontier Province against what is seen to be a monopoly by the
Punjabi majority of the benefits of power, profit, and patronage.
Pakistan's political instability over time has been matched by a fierce
ideological debate about the form of government it should adopt, Islamic
or secular. In the absence of any nationally based political party,
Pakistan has long had to rely on the civil service and the army to
maintain the continuities of government. The Emergence of
Pakistan There was an obvious
contradiction in a demand for a separate Muslim state and the claim to be
speaking for all Indian Muslims. During the remaining years of the British
Raj in India neither Jinnah nor the Muslim League explained how Muslims in
the minority provinces could benefit from a Pakistan based on an undivided
Punjab, Sind, North-West Frontier Province, and Baluchistan in the
northwest, and an undivided Bengal and Assam in the northeast. Jinnah did
at least had tried to get around the inconsistencies by arguing that since
there were two nations in India-Hindu and Muslim-any transfer of power
from British to Indian hands would necessarily entail disbanding of the
unitary center created by the imperial rulers. Reconstitution of the
Indian union would have to be based on either confederal or treaty
arrangements between Pakistan (representing the Muslim-majority provinces)
and Hindustan (representing the Hindu-majority provinces). Jinnah also
maintained that Pakistan would have to include an undivided Punjab and
Bengal. The substantial non-Muslim minorities in both these provinces were
the best guarantee that the Indian National Congress would see sense in
negotiating reciprocal arrangements with the Muslim League to safeguard
the interests of Muslim minorities in Hindustan. Despite Jinnah's
large claims, the Muslim League failed to build up effective party
machinery in the Muslim-majority provinces. Consequently the league had no
real control over either the politicians or the populace at the base that
was mobilized in the name of Islam. During the final negotiations,
Jinnah's options were limited by uncertain commitment of the
Muslim-majority province politicians to the league's goals in the demand
for Pakistan. The outbreak of communal troubles constrained Jinnah further
still. In the end he had little choice but to settle for a Pakistan
stripped of the non-Muslim majority districts of the Punjab and Bengal and
to abandon his hopes of a settlement that might have secured the interests
of all Muslims. But the worst cut of all was Congress's refusal to
interpret partition as a division of India between Pakistan and Hindustan.
According to the Congress, partition simply meant that certain areas with
Muslim majorities were 'splitting off' from the "Indian union." The
implication was that if Pakistan failed to survive, the Muslim areas would
have to return to the Indian union; there would be no assistance to
recreate it on the basis of two sovereign states. With this agreement
nothing stood in the way of the reincorporation of the Muslim areas into
the Indian union except the notion of a central authority, which had yet
to be firmly established. To establish a central authority proved to be
difficult, especially since the provinces had been governed from New Delhi
for so long and the separation of Pakistan's eastern and western wings by
one thousand miles of Indian territory. Even if Islamic sentiments were
the best hope of keeping the Pakistani provinces unified, their
pluralistic traditions and linguistic affiliations were formidable
stumbling blocks. Islam had certainly been a useful rallying cry, but it
had not been effectively translated into the solid support that Jinnah and
the League needed from the Muslim provinces in order to negotiate an
arrangement on behalf of all Indian Muslims. The diversity of
Pakistan's provinces, therefore, was a potential threat to central
authority. While the provincial arenas continued to be the main centers of
political activity, those who set about creating the centralized
government in Karachi were either politicians with no real support or
civil servants trained in the old traditions of British Indian
administration. The inherent weaknesses of the Muslim League's structure,
together with the absence of a central administrative apparatus that could
coordinate the affairs of the state, proved to be a crippling disadvantage
for Pakistan overall. The presence of millions of refugees called for
urgent remedial action by a central government that, beyond not being
established, had neither adequate resources nor capacities. The commercial
groups had yet to invest in some desperately needed industrial units. And
the need to extract revenues from the agrarian sector called for state
interventions, which caused a schism between the administrative apparatus
of the Muslim League and the landed elite who dominated the Muslim League.
Power and
Governance Between 1958 and
1971 President Ayub Khan, through autocratic rule was able to centralize
the government without the inconvenience of unstable ministerial
coalitions that had characterized its first decade after independence.
Khan brought together an alliance of a predominantly Punjabi army and
civil bureaucracy with the small but influential industrial class as well
as segments of the landed elite, to replace the parliamentary government
by a system of Basic Democracies. Basic Democracies code was founded on
the premise of Khan's diagnosis that the politicians and their
"free-for-all" type of fighting had had ill effect on the country. He
therefore disqualified all old politicians under the Elective Bodies
Disqualification Order, 1959 (EBDO). The Basic Democracies institution was
then enforced justifying "that it was democracy that suited the genius of
the people." A small number of basic democrats (initially eighty thousand
divided equally between the two wings and later increased by another forty
thousand) elected the members of both the provincial and national
assemblies. Consequently the Basic Democracies system did not empower the
individual citizens to participate in the democratic process, but opened
up the opportunity to bribe and buy votes from the limited voters who were
privileged enough to vote. By giving the civil
bureaucracy (the chosen few) a part in electoral politics, Khan had hoped
to bolster central authority, and largely American-directed, programs for
Pakistan's economic development. But his policies exacerbated existing
disparities between the provinces as well as within them. Which gave the
grievances of the eastern wing a potency that threatened the very
centralized control Khan was trying to establish. In West Pakistan,
notable successes in increasing productivity were more than offset by
growing inequalities in the agrarian sector and their lack of
representation, an agonizing process of urbanization, and the
concentration of wealth in a few industrial houses. In the aftermath of
the 1965 war with India, mounting regional discontent in East Pakistan and
urban unrest in West Pakistan helped undermine Ayub Khan's authority,
forcing him to relinquish power in March 1969. Bangladesh
Secedes A Democratic
Government Upon assuming power
General Zia banned all political parties and expressed his determination
to recast the Pakistani state and society into an Islamic mold. In April
1979 Bhutto was executed on murder charges and the PPP's remaining
leadership was jailed or exiled. By holding nonparty elections and
initiating a series of Islamization policies, Zia sought to create a
popular base of support in the hope of legitimizing the role of the
military in Pakistani politics. The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in
December 1979 caused Zia's regime to receive international support as a
stable government bordering Soviet territory. Although Pakistan had now
formally disentangled its self from both SEATO and CENTO and joined the
nonaligned movement, was regarded by the West as an important front-line
state and is a major recipient of American military and financial aid.
Despite a string of statistics advertising the health of the economy,
murmurs of discontent, though muffled, continued to be heard. On December
30, 1985, after confirming his own position in a controversial "Islamic"
referendum, completing a fresh round of nonparty elections of the
provincial and national assemblies, and introducing a series of amendments
to the 1973 constitution, Zia finally lifted martial law and announced the
dawn of a new democratic era in Pakistan. This new democratic
era was just as turbulent as Pakistan's previous political history. Major
political parties called for a boycott the 1985 election due to the
non-party bias platform. In absence of political parties the candidates
focused on local issues that superseded the majority of the candidates
affiliations to particular parties. The Pakistani people were obviously
interested in participating in the democratic process and disregarded the
urge to boycott, 52.9% cast ballots for the National Assembly and 56.9%
cast ballots for the provincial elections. President Zia first
initiative was to introduce amendments to the 1973 constitution that would
secure his power over the parliamentary system. The eighth amendment
turned out to be the most detrimental to the people's faith in the
democratic system. Now the president could possess complete control and
power to take any step, which he felt was necessary to secure national
integrity. For the next twelve years the presidents used this amendment to
expel a number of prime ministers from their post, mainly due to either
personal struggles or insecurity over shift in power. Following the 1988
election, Muhammad Khan Junejo was nominated as the prime minister, who
had a unanimous vote of confidence by the National Assembly. Junejo seemed
to be a promising component to the Pakistani government; he fostered a
smooth transition from the army to civil authority, which generated
optimism about the democratic process of Pakistan. For the first of his
years in office, Junejo was able to strike a balance between establishing
the parliamentary credentials as a democratic body and maintaining
President Zia's blessing. He developed the five-point program that aimed
at improving development, literacy rate, eliminating corruption and
improvement of the common man's lot. He was as well improving foreign
policy abroad and was grappling a major budgetary deficit from the heavy
expenditure of the martial law regimes. But on May 29th 1988 President Zia
dissolved the National Assembly and removed the prime minister under the
article 58-2-b of the Constitution. He claimed that Jenejo was conspiring
against him in order to undermine his position; he blamed the National
Assembly of corruption and failure to enforce Islamic way of life.
The opposition
parties were in support of Zia's decision because it worked in their
benefit, providing an early election. They demanded elections to be
schedule in ninety days in accordance with the constitution. President Zia
interpreted this article of the constitution differently. He felt he was
required to announce the election schedule in ninety days while the
elections could be held later. Simultaneously he wanted to hold the
elections on a non-party basis as he had in 1985, but the Supreme Court
upheld that this went against the spirit of the constitution. Political
confusion ensued as a result of Zia's proposal to postpone the elections
to re-structure the political system in the name of Islam. There was fear
that Zia may impose martial law and the Muslim League became split between
supporters of Zia and Junejo. All of this was stalled when Zia died in a
plane crash on august 17th. Ghulam Ishaq Khan
was sworn in as president being the chairman of the Senate and elections
were initiated. Which surprised to outside observers who feared that the
military could easily take over power. The November elections of 1988 were
based on political party platforms for the first time in fifteen years.
None of the parties won the majority of the National Assembly but the
Pakistan People's Party emerged as the single largest holder of seats.
Benazir Bhutto, the PPP's chairperson, was named prime minister after the
PPP formed a coalition of smaller parties to form a working majority. At
first people were hopeful that Bhutto would work together with the
opposition party's leader Nawaz Sharif of the IJI party, who headed the
Punjabi party, the majority province. But soon they escalated bitterness
to new heights and drained the economy with bribes to other politicians to
sway affiliations. These accounts plus no improvement on the economic
front scarred the central government's image. In 1990 the President
dismissed Bhutto under the eighth amendment of the constitution, a
decision upheld by the Supreme Court. So once again elections were held a
short two years later. The Pakistani people
were losing faith in the democratic system. They felt it was corrupt,
haphazard and based on the squabbles of the military and bureaucratic
elite. This attitude was reinforced by the fact that Nawaz Sharif was
assigned prime minister in 1990, and dismissed in 1993 even though he had
liberalized investment, restored confidence of domestic and international
investors, so that investment increased by 17.6%. And as a result the GDP
had a growth rate of 6.9% while the inflation stayed under 10%. President
Ghulam Ishaq Khan was accused of conspiring with Benazir Bhutto in the
dismissal of Sharif. For the first time in Pakistan's history the Supreme
Court declared that the dismissal of the National Assembly and Sharif
unconstitutional, reinstating Sharif and the National Assembly. This act
showed that the president was not the overriding power but the events that
followed proved how unstable the government was. Through bribes and palace
intrigues Ghulam was able to influence a rebellion in Punjab in 1993,
which represented Sharif and his party as incompetent. This situation
caused an upheaval in the system that resulted in intervention of the
chief of Army Staff General, Abdul Waheed Kaker. It was agreed that both
the president and prime minister would resign and new elections would be
arranged. An even lower turn
out affected the legitimacy of the all too frequent electoral process. In
this election the mandate was divided by the same players, the PPP with
Bhutto and the Muslim League with Sharif. Sharif had lost the popular
support in Punjab, which caused the PPP to claim the majority of the
seats. So once again the PPP claimed the majority of the seats and Bhutto
was placed as prime minister. She was able to get Farooq Ahmad Khan
Leghari elected as president, which secured her government against the
eighth amendment. Regardless Bhutto was unable to run a just government;
she fell back into corruption, misuses of state resources, which was
detrimental to the Pakistani people. Both the Chief Justice and President
wanted to maintain the autonomy of their position in the government, while
Bhutto was attempting to override the political system. President Leghari
soon dismissed her with the support of the Supreme Court. The public
hailed this decision and in February 1997 prepared for new elections, the
fifth in twelve years. The voter support for the elections waned
proportionately throughout these twelve years. It was obvious that
the two leading parties were alternating public support when Sharif and
the Muslim League were reinstated as the Prime Minister and majority party
respectively. The Muslim League used its parliamentary majority to enact a
fundamental change in the political system with the introduction of
amendments thirteen in the constitution. The thirteenth amendment limited
the power of the president to that of a nominal head of state, while
restoring the parliament as the central governmental power. This amendment
basically created a check and balance procedure to article eight, in an
attempt to maintain political stability. By 1999 the eighth amendment was
stripped of the constraints that empowered the president to dissolve the
National Assembly or dismiss the prime minister. These legislative feats
were impressive, but overall the Muslim League's performance was mixed.
They inherited a lot of obstacles, an economy that was on the verge of
collapse and a political culture of corruption. The May 1998 decision to
conduct nuclear tests in response to India's nuclear tests resulted in the
imposition of sanctions that stifled the economy even more so. Bhutto's
corrupt usage of foreign funds and the freezing of foreign investments
further complicated investment relations. Turmoil
The Pakistani people
thought that this may be on a temporary basis and once things had
stabilized, Musharraf would call for new elections of the National
Assembly. But Musharraf has refused to reinstate the National Assembly via
elections until October 2002, a deadline set by the Supreme Court. In July
of 2001 Musharraf declared himself president before meeting with the
Indian prime minister to legitimize his authority within the Pakistani
government. He has since recalled all regional militant Islamic factions
through out Pakistan and encouraged them to return their weapons to the
central government. He has been unwavering on Pakistan's position on
Kashmir, which resulted in shortening talks with India. He is now
cooperating with the American government and western world in the
coalition against terrorism, which puts him in an awkward position with
his Afghanistan neighbors and the fractious groups within Pakistan who
sympathize with the Taliban and Osama Bin Laden on an ethnic, ideological
and political level. Mohammad Ali Jinnah
had always envisioned a democratic Pakistan and many of his successors
have struggle towards this goal, but not more than maintaining their own
platforms of power. It is ironic that such political instability plagues a
country whose number one objective of its leaders is to secure their own
power. Maybe it is time for a new equation. The actions of both civil and
military leaders have exhaustively tried the Pakistani people and their
struggle as a nation. Pakistan faces the unenviable task of setting
government priorities in accordance with the needs of its diverse and
unevenly developed constituent units. Regardless of the form of
government--civilian or military, Islamic or secular--solutions of the
problem of mass illiteracy and economic inequities on the one hand, and
the imperatives of national integration and national security will also
determine the degree of political stability, or instability, that Pakistan
faces in the decades ahead. But the people and the nation persevere
offering the world great cultural, religious, and intellectual traditions.
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