November/December 1994, Pages 21, 91
Report From Pakistan
Pakistan's Revolving Door Politics Producing
Declining Living Standards
By M.M. Ali
Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto has been in power for less than a
year, but the talk of "how long?" has already started
in Islamabad and Washington. The question stems not from lack of
performance on the part of her government, but from the extra-constitutional
manner in which governments have changed in Pakistan in recent years,
although each change has been regularized through elections.
This is Benazir Bhutto's second term in office. Her first administration
was brought to a premature end in 1990 by the machinations of then-President
Ishaq Khan in collaboration with the then and now leader of the
opposition, Mian Nawaz Sharif. Sharif succeeded Bhutto but then
met the same fate when he was forced out by Ishaq Khan last year.
At that time both major political parties, Bhutto's People's Party
and Nawaz's Muslim League, demanded an end to the Eighth Amendment
to the Constitution that allows the president almost free authority
to dismiss a constitutionally elected government. However, this
legacy of the late Gen. Zia Ul-Haq remains on the books.
What followed the departure of Nawaz Sharif was the installation
of an interim government at the behest of the army when Ishaq Khan,
too, was forced to step down. Retired World Bank official Moeen
Qureshi was invited to become a caretaker prime minister to insure
"free and fair" elections. None of this was in accordance
with the constitution or any law of the land. The army approved
it and no one openly questioned it. Qureshi, who therefore was accountable
to no one, not only held the elections but made radical changes
in Pakistan's financial and revenue structures and exposed corruption
in the government.
When Qureshi departed, the successor Bhutto government was left
to choose between two courses of action. She could continue his
austerity program, approved by the IMF, World Bank and the U.S.,
along with the army, and be accused of being the handmaiden of the
military and external forces, or she could disown the financial
restructuring and face a new crisis and the ire of the army. Enjoying
a very slender majority in the National Assembly, she has had to
engage for the last 12 months in a balancing act to accommodate
the fiscal belt-tightening while at the same time striving to keep
the populist aura of the People's Party. To accomplish all this
while absorbing the jabs of opposition leader Nawaz Sharif and problems
created by her own family members, Benazir has been riding a rough
road. Nor can she forget that, in spite of her constitutional right
to rule, she has to keep Gen. Abdul Waheed, the army chief of staff,
in good humor. No wonder Pakistanis continue to ask The Question.
Country's Polarization
The Eighth Amendment was not the only headache the late General
Zia left behind for the nation. To suit his own narrow objectives,
he created serious cleavages and divisions in a multi-ethnic society.
His obsession, the records now make clear, was to destroy the Pakistan
People's Party (PPP), established by Benazir's father, Zulfiqar
Ali Bhutto, in the Sindh province. To this end, Zia caused splits
among residents of the province. By transferring the nation's capital
from Karachi, Sindh, to Islamabad, Punjab in the early 1960s, then-President
Ayub Khan already had planted discontent among the Sindhis and the
neo-Sindhis, meaning the Mohajirs, who had settled in Sindh after
fleeing India when the subcontinent was partitioned between India
and Muslim Pakistan. Punjabi-speaking Mohajirs who fled India settled
in Pakistan's Punjab province, while Urdu-speaking Mohajirs settled
in urban Sindh province. The now more than 10 million Mohajirs compete
in Karachi, Pakistan's port and a major industrial entity, for jobs
with the local population as well as migrants to the city from the
Punjab and the North West Frontier Province (NWFP).
Zia's military government encouraged the Pathans, the Punjabis
and the Mohajirs to form their own political organizations, and
then pitted Pathans and Punjabis against the Mohajirs. Later the
Mohajirs and the native Sindhis became bitter political rivals in
Karachi. This rivalry, which still continues, degenerated into ugly
gang warfare. Abductions, carjackings, kidnappings for large ransoms,
torture and murder became commonplace, and once peaceful and culturally
diverse Karachi slipped into a city of deep divisions and distrust.
A quota system deprived Mohajirs with merit of a fair share in
the national or Sindh province public sector jobs, and severely
reduced their chances of getting into professional schools of higher
learning. Polarization on the political level was nearly complete.
Mohajirs voted for Mohajirs and non-Mohajirs voted for non-Mohajirs.
The sense of deprivation among the Mohajirs was further accentuated
as growth of the city's infrastructure and physical amenities lagged
behind the astronomically increasing population. (This, unfortunately,
now is true for all of Pakistan's cities.)
Polarization on the political level was nearly complete.
The Mohajir Qaumi Movement (MQM) led by Altaf Husain, who now lives
in exile in London with criminal charges pending against him, has
been in and out of favor with both Mian Nawaz Sharif and Benazir
Bhutto. The MQM has also fallen into disfavor with the army. MQM
demands have ranged from proportional representation in the federal
and provincial governments to calls for autonomy for Karachi.
MQM's bargaining chip has been the 15 to 16 seats it held in the
National Assembly. However, that has vanished because of Altaf's
decision to boycott the last general elections. Whatever his motive,
his movement lost its ability to bargain at the federal level, and
rumors abound about his decision.
Fending for Themselves
Governments in Pakistan appear to be adhering to the adage that
the government that governs least governs best. With recurring breakdowns
of law and order in some major urban areas, particularly in Karachi
and Hyderabad, private security agencies have mushroomed. Anyone
with army or police experience who also has money or connections
(most do) can get into the security business. Private homes or whole
neighborhoods are barricaded behind electronically controlled gates.
Armed private guards check visitors at entrances. A new face in
the neighborhood is viewed with suspicion and is checked out by
the private security agencies. No one wants to drive an expensive
car. Only the courageous shop after dark.
Drinking water companies deliver potable water for a fee. People
with money buy a truckload of water each week because of the severe
water shortage. Water trickling through municipal pipelines is highly
contaminated. Intestinal diseases are common and chronic. In Islamabad,
a planned capital city, a recent drought forced the government to
permit private residents to dig wells in their backyards to meet
their drinking water needs.
Power generation plants are inadequate and aging. Because available
power is inadequate for both domestic and industrial use, power
outages are almost a daily routine. The electricity is often out
for hours or even days. In Lahore and Islamabad, the power supply
is rationed for fixed hours of the day in a procedure popularly
known as load-shedding. In Karachi, the electricity goes off at
random. Commerical retail outlets and wealthy homeowners have installed
their own private generators to substitute during outages. The daring
and the foolish attempt to install unauthorized direct connections
from the main street power lines into their homes. Accidents, many
times fatal, are not unknown.
The quality of life in Pakistan did not deteriorate overnight.
For 11 long years, General Zia's military government did little
to alleviate the decaying infrastructure and dwindling basic amenities
of life. For the past six years, since Zia's death, it has been
a sad political tug-of-war between Benazir Bhutto and Nawaz Sharif,
with the army and President Ishaq Khan playing either the arbitrator's
or the spoiler's role. Pakistan now has a falling literacy rate,
while the annual population increase has climbed above 3 percent.
Both are dubious, but probably interconnected, distinctions. For
a country with decaying infrastructures and declining resources,
they are catastrophes.
M.M. Ali is a professor at the University of the District of
Columbia. |