BALOCHUNITY.ORG    BALOCHUNITY.ORG

mail@balochunity.org

  front page

 | ABOUT US | NEWS | FACTS | OPINIONSLETTERS | HISTORY | ECONOMY | LINKS | GUESTBOOK | FORUM 

CONTACT & SITE MAP

  BALOCHUNITY.ORG

    SEARCH 


    QUESTIONER'S 

Should Baloch support construction of US consulate in Balochistan?




Vote   Results

    NEWS & OTHER LANG. NEWS

 08.02.2012

 Graphic details: Killing of Brahumdagh Bugti’s sister and niece in Karachi on 31st January

Brahamdagh Bugti’s sister Zamur Bugti (34), and 13-year old daughter, Jaana Domki were visiting the house of Zamur’s maternal uncle after attending a wedding ce...


 07.02.2012

 Gas line, railway track blown up, target killing claims two lives in Naushki Security official injured in landmine blast in Dera Bugti

QUETTA: Unidentified people exploded three gas pipelines in Dera Bugti while a railway track was also blown up in Dera Murad Jamali on Monday. Explosives were f...


 03.02.2012

 Gas pipeline blown up in Dera Bugti

QUETTA: Unidentified people blew up an 8-inch diameter gas pipeline in Pirkoh area of Dera Bugti on Thursday. According to official sources, unidentified miscre...


 02.02.2012

 Balochistan: BLA kills 15 soldiers near Quetta

* Militants attack four FC checkposts near Margat coalmine* Forces launch massive search, recover seven bodiesBy Mohammad Zafar QUETTA: At least 15 personnel of...


 31.01.2012

 Balochistan lawmaker’s wife, daughter assassinated

Karachi: At least seven persons, including wife and daughter of a Balochistan Assembly lawmaker, were shot dead in a fresh outbreak of violence here. The w...


all news >>

OPINIONS    

Pakistan at crossroads

13.02.2008

By Amir Taheri, Special to Gulf News
Published: February 13, 2008, 00:20

For the first time since its creation as a state, Pakistan has an opportunity to organise reasonably free and fair general elections next week.

Initial attempts by elements within the military to exclude some parties and efforts by some groups to organise a boycott front have failed, and we are witnessing the most widely contested polls Pakistan has seen.

The only danger now is that the entourage of President General (retired) Pervez Musharraf may be tempted to fix the results to ensure their continued hold on power.

It is not difficult to see why Musharraf might find it hard to resist the temptation of committing electoral fraud.

Last year he had to declare a state of emergency, purge the Supreme Court of unfriendly judges and bulldoze his way to re-election by a legislature filled with his supporters.

It is normal that Musharraf might not wish to take the gamble.

As a paratrooper he has often depended on short and sharp operations designed to take him out of a tight corner. A nice little scheme of fixing the election results, something in which the Pakistani bureaucracy excels, would represent precisely such an operation.

As things stand, Musharraf could pull off the trick without great difficulty.

The Pakistani political elite is still too divided and confused about its strategy to put up much of a resistance. The military, under General Ashfaq Kiyani, appear determined to stay out of politics - at least for the time being.

The United States, under a lame-duck administration, would have to go along with whatever Musharraf does until after the November American presidential and Congressional elections.

Nevertheless, Musharraf should resist the temptation. Fixing the results of this election might save the Musharraf presidency for a while but could wreck Pakistan.

Let's face the facts.

While the global media is fixated about events in South Waziristan, which accounts for less than one half of one per cent of Pakistan's national territory, little attention is paid to the bigger picture.

Bigger picture

That bigger picture reveals breakaway trends in all the four provinces that together form the Islamic Republic of Pakistan.

In Balochistan, the largest in terms of territory but the smallest in terms of population, the recent "targeted killing" of Akbar Bugti, a local tribal chief and veteran rebel, has triggered a blood feud that may not be forgotten soon.

The idea of an independent Greater Balochistan, which would incorporate Iran's 2.2 million Baloch plus a further 1.2 million who live in Afghanistan seems to have become more popular than ever.

Sindh is also witnessing the rise of secessionist groups. Within Sindh, Karachi, a mammoth urban sprawl of some 20 million people, is the theatre of a civil war within a civil war.

There, the immigrant Muslim communities who came from the rest of the Indian subcontinent are trying to affirm themselves against both the Sindhis and the Pakistani state in general.

The Northwest Frontier province, where ethnic Pushtuns form a majority, has always been receptive to a secessionist discourse.

The Pushtun-jihadi alliance dreams of conquering the Pushtun parts of Afghanistan, creating a Greater Pushtunistan that would then serve as a springboard for further global conquests in the name of Taliban-style Islam.

That leaves Punjab, the province that accounts for more than 60 per cent of Pakistan's population of 170 million.

The Punjabis of Pakistan look across the border to the half of the historic Punjab that remained part of India and see a different picture.

They see democracy at work, with governments changing through elections rather than coups d'etat and insurgency. They see India enjoying economic growth rates topping 10 per cent per annum while Pakistan barely manages half of that.

All this does not mean that Pakistan is doomed.

In fact, I have always maintained that a sense of Pakistani-ness has taken shape over the past six decades and that, though an artificial state, the Islamic Republic of Pakistan is loved by a majority of its citizens.

What Pakistan needs, has always needed, is a system in which the public space reflects the diversity of the nation. Such a system cannot work without free and fair elections.

Musharraf is not the typical military dictator as Ayoub Khan, Yahya Khan and Zia ul-Haq were. Unlike his military predecessors, he has not engaged in self-enrichment or despicable behaviour.

He has tried, not always successfully, to preserve at least a veneer of legality and constitutionality. However, it is only now that Musharraf is being put to the supreme test of his character.

Few military leaders have sacrificed their careers to the greater cause of genuine pluralism.

The latest opinion polls show that in the coming Pakistani election, Musharraf's political allies cannot win more than 20 per cent of the votes.

Will he allow the elections to reflect the true sentiments of the Pakistanis, even though these might go against his political positions? Or, short of trying to change a people who might not agree with him, will he try to write the script in his favour?

Next week's election could provide the answer.

Amir Taheri is an Iranian writer based in Europe.

http://www.gulfnews.com/opinion/columns/world/10189243.html

« Previous  |  Next »

• 08.02.2008 - Balochistan on the brink
• 07.02.2008 - Pakistan will remain unstable: Selig Harrison
• 04.02.2008 - Perspective: Another time, another place
• 01.02.2008 - Drawn and Quartered
• 28.01.2008 - Memories: BB and Balochistan

All opinions  |  Opinions archive

  BALOCHUNITY.ORG

    MAP 

  BALOCHUNITY.ORG

    COLUMNISTS 

 - Mir Mohammad Ali Talpur

 31.07 - COMMENT: Saggaan ra kushaada-and, ‘o’ sing ra basta
 24.07 - COMMENT: Aung San Suu Kyi: the beacon — I
 24.07 - “COMMENT: Rolling back the tsunami
 03.07 - COMMENT: The judge, jury and the hangman
 03.07 - COMMENT: Not crazy, courageous

 -  Sanaullah Baloch

 07.01 - Judiciary, parliament silent on Baloch issues
 25.11 - Exploitation of Mineral Wealth
 24.10 - From Chile to Chagai
 26.09 - The Baloch agony in Pakistan
 26.08 - The great Baloch martyr

 - Aziz Baloch

 14.04 - A Message to Honorable Leaders of the Baloch "Nation"
 13.11 - A Voice of a Baloch
 27.09 - Two Women’s Tragedies in Balochistan: Honor Killing and Rape.
 25.08 - Self-determination of Balochistan: Looking Back and Looking Forward
 11.08 - United Nations: It’s Contribution to the Everlasting Balochistan Crisis

 Malik Siraj Akbar
 - ANALYSIS: Strategic mess

all columnists >>

Copyright ©2007 BalochUnity.org. All rights reserved.  

Free Web Hit Counter
Online Casino

mail@balochunity.org

  front page

 | ABOUT US | NEWS | FACTS | OPINIONSLETTERS | HISTORY | ECONOMY | LINKS | GUESTBOOK | FORUM 

CONTACT & SITE MAP