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: Pakistan
With tacit US support, Pakistans military regime intensifies
repression
By Keith Jones
10 November 2007
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Pakistans US-backed military regime mounted a massive
police operation Friday to stamp out a Pakistan Peoples
Party (PPP) rally called to protest the imposition of martial
law.
The government admits to having mobilized 8,500 uniformed police
and an undisclosed, but huge, number of undercover and intelligence
operatives to prevent the PPP from mounting a mass protest in
Rawalpindi. The countrys third largest city, Rawalpindi
is contiguous with Pakistans national capital, Islamabad,
and the headquarters of both the Pakistani army and air force.
To smother the protest, the military regime ordered Rawalpindis
shops closed and security personnel set up hundreds of checkpoints
across the city, using dump trucks to blockade roads leading to
the city center.
PPP supporters who managed to penetrate the security cordon
and congregate near the rally site were met with tear gas and
police baton-charges. Scores, possibly hundreds, were arrested
and carted off in police vans. Many more had been taken into preventive
detention on Thursday evening and early Friday morning.
The authorities claimed the total detained prior to Fridays
scheduled rally was less than 500. But PPP Life Chairperson Benazir
Bhuttowho was herself prevented from attending the rally
by a second massive security operation in Karachisaid some
5,000 PPP activists had been detained between Wednesday and Friday.
Early Friday morning police effectively took Bhutto hostage.
Her home in a prosperous Karachi neighborhood was surrounded by
hundreds of police, who then cordoned it off using barbed wire
and armored vehicles. Subsequently, the cordon was reinforced
with concrete slabs.
On several occasions over the next fourteen hours Bhutto tried
to leave, only to find her path blocked by the police and their
cordon. Initially, government officials claimed that Bhutto was
not under house arrest, only that she was being prevented from
going to the Rawalpindi rally for her own safety.
PPP officials were allowed to go through the police cordon
to speak with Bhutto and the PPP leader was able to conduct media
interviews by phone. But when PPP supporters tried to stage a
protest just outside the police cordon, police immediately seized
them and dragged them off to jail.
After long claiming Bhutto was not under house arrest, the
authorities suddenly presented her with an order forbidding her
from leaving her house for three days. Late Friday this order
was rescinded.
While Bhutto from the outset condemned General President Pervez
Musharrafs state of emergency, she continues to seek a power-sharing
deal with Musharraf and the military, under which the PPP leadership,
in return for a share of political power and patronage, would
provide a democratic façade for the Pakistani military,
which would continue to play the predominant role in the countrys
governance, with the backing of Washington.
According to a New York Times article dated November
10, Western diplomats insist that the back-channel talks between
Bhutto, Musharraf, and the military are continuing.
Fridays events underscore the brutal, unrestrained character
of the Pakistani military regime. Under the Provisional Constitutional
Order promulgated by Musharraf last Saturday evening, the constitution
has been indefinitely suspendedindeed, the regime failed
to avail itself of the emergency powers within the constitution
because they were deemed inadequate.
All political meetings and rallies are banned. Pakistans
jails are quickly filling up with those deemed a threat to the
regime. Ominously, several have been charged with treason, a crime
punishable by death. Most private television stations remain off
the air.
The top echelons of the judiciary have been purged, although
the judiciary has a long and inglorious history of sanctioning
military rule. The judges ran afoul of Musharraf and the military
because, under conditions of mounting popular opposition to the
regime, they had the temerity to oppose some of it most flagrant
violations of the constitution, including the disappearance and
detention without proper evidence of alleged terrorist suspects.
Musharrafs resort to martial law was triggered by his
fear that the court would strike down his re-election
in a sham vote last month that violated both the sprit and letter
of the constitution.
Overhanging the entire situation is the threat that the military
will unleash bloody violence. Last May 12-13, some 40 people were
killed in Karachi when the Musharraf regime encouraged the pro-Musharraf
MQM to launch thug attacks on anti-government protesters. On October
18, 140 people were killed in a terrorist attack aimed at Benazir
Bhuttoan attack she has said was orchestrated by elements
in and around the military government.
The Pakistani military has a long and infamous history of murderous
violence, including staging the judicial murder of Bhuttos
father, the deposed prime minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, and killing
hundreds of thousands of Bangladeshis in the militarys unsuccessful
attempt to prevent the 1971 secession of what was then East Pakistan.
The Bush administration and the entire US political establishment,
no less than Musharraf and the Pakistani generals themselves,
are responsible for the escalating repression in Pakistan. Not
only has the Bush administration, with requisite congressional
support, sustained the Musharraf regime, giving it some $10 billion
in aid, most of it military, since September 2001, it has proclaimed
Pakistan a major non-NATO ally of the US, repeatedly
lauded Musharraf as a pivotal ally in the war on terrorism,
and provided alibis for his regimes rape of the democratic
rights of the Pakistani people.
In their response to Musharrafs imposition of martial
law, all sections of the political establishment, Republican and
Democrat, have made clear that their overriding objective is to
preserve the unity and power of the Pakistani military and its
longstanding partnership with the US.
The US has supported one Pakistani military regime after another
dating back to the 1950s, because the military has served as a
tool of US geo-political interests, first in the Cold War confrontation
with the USSR and now in the name of the war on terror,
by providing pivotal support to the US elite as its seeks to gain
a stranglehold over the worlds oil resources through the
occupations of Afghanistan and Iraq and preparations for war with
Iran.
The Bush administration responded to the suppression of Fridays
protest and the house arrest of Bhutto by administering yet another
perfunctory and ritualistic hand-slapping to Musharraf.
In a statement dripping with cynicism, US National Security
Council spokesman Gordon Johndroe said Bhutto and other
political party members must be permitted freedom of movement
and all protesters released. We remain concerned about the continued
state of emergency and curtailment of basic freedoms and urge
Pakistans authorities to quickly return to constitutional
order and democratic norms.
But Bhutto herself has said that the US Ambassador to Pakistan,
Anne Patterson, added her voice to those in the military regime
who were trying to persuade her to cancel Fridays rally
in Rawalpindi. When asked about this Thursday, US State Department
spokesman Sean McCormack failed to deny Bhuttos claim, saying
he would not get into the details of Annes conversation.
Also on Thursday, Bush administration officials hailed Musharrafs
announcement that legislative elections will be held by February
15, one month later than the schedule announced prior to the declaration
of a state of emergency. We think its a good thing
that President Musharraf has clarified the election date for the
Pakistani people, said White House Press Secretary Dana
Perino.
The claim that this statement represents a step toward democracy
exemplifies the USs indifference and utter hostility to
the most elementary rights of the Pakistani people.
Musharraf, who came to power through a military coup, time
and again has broken similar promises, and his regime has a long
record of trampling on democratic rights and stage-managing elections.
In this instance, he has not even said that he will lift the emergency
prior to the elections. Information Minister Tariq Azim Khan has
observed that previous elections have been held in Pakistan under
states of emergency.
The USs other major demandthat Musharraf fulfill
his pledge to give up his post as head of the military and become
a civilian presidentsanctions the sham October
6 presidential election and the constitutional changes Mushharaf
previously made to strengthen the powers of the presidency and
ensure, through a National Security Council, the preponderant
role of the military in setting government policy.
The real attitude of the Bush administration and the US political
establishment toward the political crisis in Pakistan was laid
out by US Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte in testimony
before the House Foreign Affairs Committee Wednesday. Negroponte,
who has a long record of abetting mass repression in Central America
and Iraq, vehemently opposed any reduction in US aid to Pakistan,
declaring that there was not a mission in the world more
deserving of our persistence and considered patience than
the partnership between Pakistan and the USthat is, between
the Pentagon and the Pakistani military.
Joseph Biden, the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee and an aspirant for the 2008 Democratic presidential
nomination, has meanwhile called for a tripling of US non-military
aid to Pakistan to $1.5 billion per year for the next 10 years.
As for military aid, he said it should be conditional on Pakistani
performancethat is, on Pakistan doing even more to suppress
pro-Taliban support in areas bordering Afghanistan. It not
clear were getting our moneys worth in respect
to security assistance, complained Biden.
Bidens comments speak to the some of what are the real
misgivings of the US establishment in respect to Musharraf. The
central concern is that the recourse to martial law may backfire,
provoking a mass political upheaval that redounds against the
interests of the Pakistani military, the Pakistani bourgeoisie
as a whole, and US imperialism.
The Pakistani elite shares the fears of the US political and
corporate establishment that the crisis in Pakistan could provide
an opening for the long-oppressed and abused Pakistani masses
to enter the political arena.
Both the New York Times and BBC admitted that Fridays
events had to a large degree a choreographed character. For Bhutto,
who has come under attack for her attempts to strike a power-sharing
deal with Musharraf and her burgeoning alliance with Washington,
it was important to be seen as challenging martial law.
By the same token, she was not all that unhappy to see the
protest squashed, for she is anxious to avoid unleashing a series
of escalating protests that could escape the control of the elite
and /or result in bloody clashes between the military and the
populace, which could raise the possibility of splits within the
military itself.
Speaking under the cloak of anonymity, a Western diplomat said
the major capitalist powers have been urging Bhutto to pursue
negotiations with Musharraf and that Bhutto agrees with a course
aimed at not totally disrupt[ing] the entire apple cart.
The other major opposition groupings, Nawaz Sharifs Pakistan
Muslim League (Nawaz) and the MMA, the six-party coalition of
Islamic fundamentalist parties, bore more of the brunt of the
initial wave of arrests than the PPP. But their failure to call
for, let alone mount, mass protests against the regime cannot
be explained by this.
Their popular following has been eroded by their right-wing
socio-economic policies, religious obscurantism, and own record
of conniving with the military in robbing the people of their
democratic rights. Moreover, they too fear the possible consequences
of a clash between a galvanized populace and the principal bulwark
of capitalist rule in Pakistan, the military.
See Also:
Deepening political crisis in Pakistan
[9 November 2007]
As Pakistanis risk life and limb to oppose
Musharraf, US elite rallies round military regime
[7 November 2007]
As Pakistanis battle martial law, US
vows continued aid to Musharraf
[6 November 2007]
With Washingtons complicity, Musharraf
imposes martial law on Pakistan
[5 November 2007]
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