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Washington lauds Pakistans sham presidential election
By Keith Jones
9 October 2007
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The Bush administration has lauded the sham election Pakistans
military regime staged Saturday to extend General Pervez Musharrafs
presidential mandate till the fall of 2012.
Pakistan is an important partner and ally to the United
States and we congratulate them for todays election,
declared US National Security Council spokesman Gordon Johndroe.
Had Johndroe been more honest, he would have said Washington
was extending congratulations to the Pakistani military for its
subverting of democracy.
Saturdays presidential vote was a travesty of Pakistans
constitution and of the most elementary democratic principles.
An electoral college comprised of legislators from the countrys
national and provincial parliaments who were chosen fully five
years ago and in elections that were rigged by the military was
empowered to give Musharraf a further five-year term as president.
The general, who seized power in a 1999 coup, refused to stand
for election as a civilian, although the constitution specifically
bars members of the military from seeking or holding office. Musharraf
clings to his post as head of Pakistans armed forces because
he is acutely conscious that the military remains his one true
base of support and because he wants to be able to threaten his
opponents within the elite and the Pakistani people with martial
law, and to personally supervise the repression, should they disrupt
his re-election.
Moreover, the election commission, which is staffed with Musharraf
loyalists, last month declared that it had amended the constitutionthereby
exercising a power that is vested in Pakistans parliamentand
set aside a prohibition on persons standing for election until
two years after they have retired from the military or state bureaucracy.
Some 200 opposition legislators resigned their seats in the
days running up to Saturdays sham presidential election.
Even the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP), which has struck
a bargain with the military regime in pursuit of a share of power,
has challenged the legitimacy of the election and of Musharrafs
candidacy before the Supreme Court and ordered its legislators
to abstain in Saturdays vote.
But none of this is of any consequence to the White House.
Its attitude to the democratic rights of the Pakistani people
is no different from that of Musharraf who dismissed all questions
surrounding the legality and legitimacy of the election by declaring
democracy means majority, whether there is opposition or
no opposition. The general-president then refused to rule
out imposing martial law should the Supreme Court rule either
the election or his candidacy unconstitutional. Subsequently,
an unnamed top Musharraf aide told the Pakistan correspondent
of the Globe and Mail that he retains the option of surgical
martial law.
Since September 2001 the Bush administration has provided the
Musharraf regime more than $10 billion in aid. President Bush,
Vice President Cheney and US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
have repeatedly hailed the general-president as a pivotal ally
in the war on terror, while condoning his regimes flagrant
violation of human rights, including last Mays massacre
of opposition supporters in Karachi.
We look forward to the electoral commissions announcement,
said Johndroe, and to working with all of Pakistans
leaders on important bilateral, regional and counterterrorism
issues.
No sooner were the votes from Saturdays election tabulated
than the election commission rushed to announce that Musharraf
had won 98 percent of the votes cast and that Musharaffs
vote equaled 55 percent of the electoral college. But the commission
has been unable to certify these results and proclaim Musharraf
elected because of a Supreme Court ruling issued on the eve of
Saturdays vote.
The court, which has a long history of kowtowing to the military,
rejected opposition petitions for the election to be delayed pending
its ruling on the constitutionality of parliaments chosen five
years ago constituting the presidential electoral college and
the legality of Musharraf standing as a presidential candidate
while serving as Chief of [Pakistans] Armed Services. But
Pakistans highest court did declare last Friday that the
election commission cannot formally proclaim Musharraf elected
until it rules on the legal-constitutional questions surrounding
the election.
The court is in all probability badly divided over the role
of Musharraf and the military in the countrys government.
There is much elite anger over the militarys burgeoning
economic interests, divisions over the concentration of political
power in Islamabad and economic power in the Punjab, and, last
but not least, growing apprehension over the mounting popular
opposition to Musharraf, military rule, and the regimes
neo-liberal socio-economic and abject pro-US foreign policies.
Last Fridays ruling would appear to have been aimed at
pressuring Musharraf and Benazir Bhutto and her PPP to reach agreement
on a power-sharing deal. Significantly, the court has announced
that it will resume hearing the legal challenges to the presidential
election on October 17, that is the day before Benazir Bhutto
is to return to the Pakistan from an eight-year, self-imposed
exile.
Over the past four months, the US has been strongly pushing
for Musharraf and Bhutto to strike a power-sharing deal, in which
the PPP would assist the general in staging his re-election
and, in return, the military would allow Bhutto to lead her party
in legislative elections scheduled for early 2008 and to subsequently
become prime minister.
Rice reportedly telephoned both Bhutto and Musharraf last Thursday,
when it appeared that the power-sharing negotiations were on the
point of collapse and Bhutto was threatening to instruct the PPPs
legislators to resign their seats. Only hours later both the government
and Bhutto announced that a deal, subsequently called an understanding,
was imminent.
The key to the deal was a sordid National Reconciliation
Ordinance 2007 signed into law by Musharraf late Friday.
It provides an amnesty to all those holders of public office between
1986 and October 12, 1999the day Musharraf seized poweraccused
of corruption but whose cases have not yet been adjudicated.
The government of Nawaz Sharif, whom Musharraf deposed in 1999,
had mounted various politically motivated corruption cases against
Bhutto and her husband, Asif Ali Zardari, and these were continued
by Musharraf as a means of pressuring Bhutto and her PPP. It should
be added, however, that the Bhutto regime, like that of Sharif,
and the current military regime, was notorious for its corruption.
Bhuttos husband Zardari earned the nickname Mr. 10
percent.
As per the deal, orchestrated by the Bush administration, Bhuttos
PPP broke ranks with its erstwhile opposition allies Saturday
and, while refusing to vote for Musharraf, signaled that it will
be ready to work with him if he carries out his pledge to be sworn
into office for a new presidential term as a civilian.
Washington favors a Musharraf-Bhutto partnership because it
fears that the current regime could unravel in the face of mounting
popular opposition and because it wants a politically strengthened
government in Islamabad to unleash the full force of the Pakistani
military against the Taliban and other Islamicist militias active
in the countrys remoter and more backward regions.
Traditionally such elements have been dependent on the support
of the Pakistani elite, especially the military. But in recent
years, as Islamabad has been forced to realign its geo-political
posture in accordance with US demands, these groups have gained
greater popular support by appealing to opposition to US imperialism
in Afghanistan and elsewhere and the social grievances born of
the manifest failure of the Pakistani state to provide basic public
services.
Recent months have seen the Pakistani military repeatedly thrown
on the defensive in confrontations with Islamic militia groups.
In South Waziristan some 200 army personnel have been held hostage
for several weeks. Yesterday the military announced that it had
killed 130 pro-Taliban insurgents in two days of heavy fighting
in North Waziristan, while suffering 45 army fatalities.
Given the Pakistani militarys indifference, if not hostility,
toward democratic rights and judicial norms there is every likelihood
that an all-out assault on the Taliban and Islamicist forces under
a Musharraf-Bhutto government would take the form of a veritable
civil war against the local population in those parts of Pakistan
where Islamabads writ has been challenged.
While Washington is placing great stock in a Musharraf-Bhutto
combination there are many reasons to suggest it may prove short-lived.
The leaders of the pro-Musharraf PML (Q) have bitterly resisted
a power-sharing deal with Bhutto and may yet try to scuttle it.
On Saturday, the president of the PML (Q) Shujaat Hussain boasted
that they had gotten the better of Bhutto: Our aim was that
the opposition must not be united.
Meanwhile, Information Minister Tariq Azim complained that
Bhutto was now Washingtons favorite. It is hypocritical
for anyone in Washington, exclaimed Azim, to decide
that Benazir Bhutto is to be prime minister and at the same time
say that elections must be free and fair.
Bhutto, for her part, is insisting that only the first stage
of power-sharing negotiations have been completed and that the
PPPs alliance with Musharraf must be tied to the placing
of limits on the presidents powers and the lifting of a
constitutional prohibition on her serving as prime minister for
a third time.
Bhutto has justified the PPPs alliance with Musharraf
and the military with the warning that a popular mobilization
against the government could soon escape the control of the political
elite.
But Bhuttos return to Pakistan, despite her best efforts
and those of the PPP leadership, could well prove to be a catalyst
for mass protests against the discredited, US-backed Musharraf
regime.
See Also:
Bush, Bhutto accomplices in Pakistans
sham presidential election
[6 October 2007]
With US backing, Musharraf
presses ahead with bogus presidential election
[28September 2007]
Musharraf regime seeks to
stave off collapse
[20 September 2007]
With Washingtons
blessing
Pakistani regime mounts massive security operation in Sharif deportation
[13 September 2007]
US seeks to save Pakistani
dictator, thwart democracy
[6 September 2007]
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