April 1991, Page 48
The Subcontinent
New Leaders and Tense Times
By M. M. Ali
The British relinquished their 150-year colonial rule
over the Indian subcontinent in August 1947. The subcontinent was
divided into two sovereign states: India and Pakistan. The 1930s
and 1940s produced leaders that steered the independence movement
to its culmination. They included Mahatma Gandhi, Jawaharlal Nehru,
Valabh Bhai Patel, Maulana Azad, Mohammed Ali Jinnah, Liaquat Ali
Khan, Abdur Rab Nishtar, Fazlul Haque, Khawaja Nazimuddin, Maulana
Bhashani and Husain Shaheed Suhrawardi. The political movements
were led by the National Congress in India, and the Muslim League
in Pakistan. Both states were administered by large bureaucracies
trained under the British. Sandhurst-trained generals controlled
the defense services.
Those leaders left the stage in Pakistan and in India
in the 1950s. The vacuum created in much smaller Pakistan was filled
quickly by the military officers, fully supported by the entrenched
civil service. Larger India maintained its one-party (Congress)
democracy. In December 1971, Pakistan had to part with one-half
of its geographically separated country when Bangladesh was created
out of East Pakistan as a third major sovereign state in the subcontinent.
The next phase witnessed a spate of assassinations and
one execution of the top leaders in the three countries. Rajiv Gandhi,
Shaikh Hasina, and Benazir Bhutto are the progeny and Khalida Zia
a widow of the deceased leaders. Each one of them has capitalized
on the connections. Such political capital could be exploited in
Pakistan and Bangladesh because of the intermittent military interventions
that obstructed the growth of democratic tradition and practice.
India is presently faced with recurrent political instability because
the Congress has lost its former hold and more than one party is
required to make a majority in the Lokh Sabha.
Each of the three countries is going through one crisis
or another at present. There are few visible signs of outstanding
and broadly based leadership taking meaningful control of the reins
of government. The civil service in all three states keeps a low
profile, but plays an extraordinary role in keeping the three ships
of state afloat.
This is the general backdrop to the individual dramas
being played out in the three major nations of the subcontinent,
where history is being made in Bangladesh, a prime minister has
surprised India with a preemptive resignation, and clouds of political
uncertainty are gathering in Pakistan.
Bangladesh
Bangladesh may be scoring a first in recorded human
history by swearing in a woman prime minister and inducting another
woman as the leader of the opposition. Although both of these women
had the courage to challenge a military ruler, Gen. Mohammed Ershad,
and launch successful political campaigns, a word of caution needs
to be added about their respective electoral victories, and what
they reveal about the nascent democratic process in Bangladesh.
The new prime minister, Khalida Zia, leader of the Bangladesh
National Party (BNP), owes her victory to the memory of her deceased
husband, President Ziaur Rehman, who was assassinated in 1981. Shaikh
Hasina, leader of the opposition Awami League, invoked the memory
of her father, Shaikh Mujibur Rehman, the first president of the
country, who was assassinated in 1975. In the time leading up to
the election, military governments muzzled the media and severely
curtailed political freedoms in the country. Schools and universities
that traditionally produced the young leadership remained mostly
closed, or political activity on the campuses was banned. Political
ideologies and/or platforms were not available to the general public.
In this suffocating environment, people were desperately
looking for leaders to defy authority and bring change. Shadows
of two dead men, Mujib and Zia, provided the needed rallying point.
Hasina and Khalida capitalized on it. There are close parallels
in the cases of Benazir Bhutto in Pakistan, Rajiv Gandhi in India
and Corazon Aquino in the Philippines. Each points at a vaccuum
left behind. Each tells a story of its own.
Bangladesh is a poor country with more than 10 million
people, 85 percent of whom are Muslims. Average life expectancy
is barely over 50 years. Annual per capita income is less than US
$200 and the country falls in the lower rungs of the world's less
developed countries. Besides the man-made tragedies that have visited
Bangladesh in recent years, it is also one of the areas of the world
that most often suffers such serious natural calamities as floods
and hurricanes.
In the absence of prior experience, Khalida will face
challenges that will require strong leadership. She will be surrounded
by people who will help her and wish her well, but there are others
who want her to fail.
The two ladies, during their election campaigns, had
General Ershad as the issue. They now have to contend with each
other. Whether a parliamentary form of government evolves or the
presidential system is maintained, neither of the new leaders can
afford to create too many waves too soon. In the same vein, it would
be a mistake to concentrate on Ershad's transgressions, rather than
dealing with the pressing economic questions which necessitated
the change in the first place. Benazir Bhutto's bad experience in
this regard may serve as a warning. Bangladesh, in any event, is
at a crossroads. With the return of democracy, there can be exciting
times ahead for the country.
The Turn of Events in India
The sudden resignation of Prime Minister Chandra Shekar,
whose week-old beard depicts a trimmed attention to detail and symbolizes
a state of careful carelessness, probably surprised Rajiv Gandhi
more than anybody else. However, Shekar is not to be blamed. Rajiv,
who had helped Shekar form the government, wanted more time for
his Congress (1) Party to consolidate its position while he chose
an advantageous time for new elections. Chandra Shekar, who was
living on borrowed time, could not take the pressure of uncertainty
any longer, and at the same time would not let Rajiv capitalize
on his weakness. In a pre-emptive strike, he has plunged the country
into unpredictable midseason elections.
Thus far, everything is democratic. However, in a country
with a population of over 800 million persons espousing sharply
opposing political and religious philosophies, repeated general
elections do not augur well for the health of the nation. This is
especially pertinent in light of the widespread communal and regional
disturbances that have taken place recently. Wounds are not yet
healed and the issues are still unsettled. Elections in normal times
settle disputes without bloodshed; elections in a different environment
can produce unwelcome surprises.
Indications are that no single party is likely to emerge
as the clear majority party in the Lokh Sabha, the lower house of
the Indian legislature. If the sample polls are to be relied upon,
Rajiv Gandhi may lose big, Chandra Shekar may lose, Sundarlal Patwa
may make some gains and V.P. Singh may come out as the real gainer.
Once again horse-trading will start and splinter groups will become
the determining factor. Anyone who controls 50 seats or more may
become a power broker.
At such critical times, delicate questions arise. Many
wonder if India is heading toward recurrent political crisis. And,
will this play to the advantage of centrifugal forces? Is that what
a federation should be all about, or will the trend be inimical
to the integrity of the country? Perhaps the questions are premature.
Nonetheless, there is much at stake in the coming Indian elections,
and the world will be, or should be, watching events there thoughtfully
in the coming weeks and months.
Gathering Clouds Over Pakistan
Some countries, like some people, perform best under
pressure. Where problems don't exist, they are created so that the
nervous energy building up inside can be expended. Pakistan appears
to be a case in point.
It is one of only two countries brought into being in
this century on the basis of a religion. The other is Israel. The
conditions under which Pakistan was born in 1947 were not very conducive
to normal growth. It has had more than its share of early difficulties.
Orphaned by the quick disappearance of such founding
leaders as Jinnah and Liaquat, it landed in the care of military
nannies more concerned about their own welfare and reputations than
the health of the baby. Development has consequently been slow.
The country is not a medieval state. Its people are
a vibrant populace capable of dealing with the challenges of the
modern era. After each military interlude, they have reverted back
to democracy. Unfortunately, like the rest of the subcontinent today,
it abounds with politicians and lacks statesmen.
The Soviet attack on Afghanistan, which proved to be
a Russian misadventure, faced Pakistan with a new regional challenge.
Through the Khyber Pass, the historic point of entry from the north,
poured half a million Afghan refugees. They brought with them an
illegal arms trade and narcotics smuggling.
From the reftigee camps on the outskirts of the rugged
city of Peshawar, the Afghan Mujahedeen launched the armed struggle
to liberate Afghanistan. From the northernmost part of Pakistan,
the North West Frontier Province (NWFP), however, smuggled arms
and drugs trickled down to the southern port city of Karachi.
A gun-toting Kalashnikov culture was introduced into
the peaceful Indus valley. The Sindhi cities and countryside were
dangerously polarized, resulting in open hostilities between different
ethnic groups. By now, the Soviet Union has withdrawn from Afghanistan,
and the US has revised its Afghan policies. The turmoil continues,
however, in Sindh, to the detriment of the health of the country.
The unresolved Kashmir issue also has been destabilizing
to Pakistan. Saddam Hussain sided with India on the question. The
United States, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait have not only been the traditional
friends but benefactors of Pakistan.
When Iraq invaded Kuwait, however, the Pakistani commander-in-chief,
General Aslam Baig, considered Saddam Hussain the hero! The government
of Pakistan, headed by President Ishaq Khan and Prime Minister Nawaz
Sharif, took a different approach. Nevertheless, the GOP had to
do a lot of explaining to its allies. It would be interesting to
know what transpired in General Baig's subsequent meetings with
Saudi King Fahd and US General Norman Schwarzkopf.
Bangladesh, India and Pakistan all are the inheritors
of great cultures and rich histories, and have the potential to
be leaders in a peaceful new world order. Instead, all seem to be
absorbed in the resolution of selfinflicted and petty problems and
fears.
Priorities are, unfortunately, mixed up. Shadows are
confused with substance. In Pakistan, for instance, military promotions,
transfers and retirements are dutifully followed by the general
public with mesmerized attention. Routine operational activities
in the military are studied like tea leaves to forecast the future.
Benazir Bhutto, it is rumored, is cozying up politically with Nawaz
Sharif. Ishaq, who stays close to his civil service club, and not
too far away from the Army gymkhana, is watching. The country holds
its breath.
M. M. Ali is a professor at the University of the
District of Columbia. |