“Historic”, we are being told — and
told without end — is what the judgment of their Supreme Court lordships
is. General (r) Pervez Musharraf’s Nov 3, 2007, action has been
declared “unconstitutional” and “civil society” is ecstatic, some of our
wilder drumbeaters assuring us that the doors on military
interventionism have been closed forever. Ah, if wishes were horses. The
Supreme Court judgment not so much revises history as cuts it up,
wrapping it in neat packages. For it declares only one action of
Musharraf’s unconstitutional — his Nov 3 Emergency, which came at the
fag end of his rule. The inescapable conclusion we are left with is that
everything else the man did fell within the ambit of the
Constitution.
Now what was Musharraf’s original sin from which flowed everything else?
Why, his coup d’état of Oct 12, 1999, when his generals overthrew an
elected government, disbanded the National Assembly, put the
Constitution into cold storage and imprisoned not only the then prime
minister but his closest colleagues and even members of his family. Just
as Adam ate the apple he wasn’t supposed to touch and as a consequences
was expelled from Paradise, the apple which Musharraf plucked and put
into his mouth was on the fateful evening of Oct 12, all those years
ago, when he was in the air on a flight from Sri Lanka, while his
generals — chief among them Usmani, Aziz and Mahmood — went about the
removal of the elected government. That was the mother of all sins. So
how strange and dripping with irony this omission: about that seminal
event, which set in train all the sorrows the nation was to reap
thereafter, their lordships in their “historic” judgment have nothing to
say. For this of course we must understand the problems of the past.
For in 2000, a few months after the mother of all sins, when this matter
came before the then Supreme Court headed by Chief Justice Irshad Hasan
Khan, the nation witnessed another of those electrifying performances
which have made “the doctrine of necessity” so famous in our land, the
Supreme Court validating Musharraf’s coup and, what’s more, allowing him
a grace period of three years to hold elections. In its generosity, it
also gave Musharraf the authority to amend the Constitution for purposes
of holding elections. So just as the Anwarul Haq Supreme Court gave a
clean chit to General Ziaul Haq’s coup of 1977, another Supreme Court
signed a papal bull conferring legitimacy on another illegitimate
offspring of our political adventures. Now for an inconvenient fact. On
the bench headed by Chief Justice Irshad Hasan Khan there sat an
up-and-coming jurist, stern of eye and distinguished of look, by the
name of Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry. Yes, he was among the illustrious
upholders of the law and the Constitution who bathed Musharraf and his
generals in holy water. Before that baptismal ceremony, Musharraf,
following the example of military saviours before him, had issued
another Provisional Constitutional Order (PCO) requiring judges of the
high courts and the Supreme Court to take a fresh oath pledging
obedience to the new order. A few difficult judges — among them Chief
Justice Saeeduzzaman Siddiqui, Justices Wajeehuddin, Nasir Aslam Zahid,
Mamoon Qazi, Khalilur Rehman, Kamal Mansoor Alam — spurned Musharraf’s
PCO and promptly found themselves out in the cold. But a majority,
preferring discretion over valour, thought it wiser to go along with the
new order of things. Among this lot — the original lot, that is — was
Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry. And it was from this PCO crowd,
which saw no evil in wearing the robes of the judiciary under a usurping
general, that the Supreme Court bench was composed which in
double-quick time conferred absolution on Musharraf and his triumphant
generals. Chief Justice Irshad Hasan Khan wrote the judgment and the
other judges on the bench, including Justice Chaudhry, without adding a
word of their own (which was slightly unusual) concurred with his
sweeping validation. As PCO judges they were expected to toe the line
dictated by the country’s martial law masters and, to no one’s surprise,
they went along faithfully, Chief Justice Irshad in front and they in
his train. In the museum dedicated to the doctrine of necessity this was
another trophy. So it is not a little surprising to see the present
Supreme Court coming down so hard on the Nov 3, 2007, PCO judges when
they themselves (most of them, if memory serves) felt few qualms in
being PCO judges in January 2000. Let him cast the first stone who hath
not sinned, said Christ. Their lordships of the “historic” judgment are
no doubt made of sterner stuff, preferring to interpret the past as a
closed and shut transaction while bringing down the executioner’s axe on
those who could well plead in their defence that they were doing no
more than following the example, set in times past, by their betters.
What about the nation which faces a serious test? For it is being asked
to believe, if we go along with all the implications of the “historic”
verdict, that Musharraf’s rule was legitimate until Nov 3, 2007, and it
was only his proclamation of emergency that evening which put him
outside the pale of the Constitution. This is a very selective rendering
with which most Pakistanis are not likely to agree. . According to this
interpretation Musharraf did nothing unconstitutional from Oct 12,
1999, to Nov 3, 2007, and it was only the period of emergency — from Nov
3 to Dec 15 — which is worthy of judicial censure. In other words,
according to the Supreme Court, he was a usurper not for eight and a
half years — which most people in Pakistan believe — but for a mere
40-45 days. As sins of this sort go in Pakistan, this doesn’t amount to
much of a transgression. But even if it is considered serious (and there
are people who will), its severity is mitigated by the fact that the
malefactor (Musharraf) first took off his uniform on Nov 28, 2007 (thus
doing the nation a favour it had long demanded) and lifted emergency on
Dec 15, 2007, thus returning the country to constitutional rule (as per
the implication of the Supreme Court verdict). Not only that but he went
on to hold elections. This makes him look not a demonic but rather
quite a benign figure. His original sin, it can be argued, was no longer
a sin in the eyes of the law because the PCO of 2000 and the oaths of
the judges were validated later by parliament. Very true, but this is
hair-splitting. Musharraf was a usurper as were Zia and Yahya and Ayub
before him. The others too were validated by various judicial and
constitutional instruments. But all these actions remain blots on our
history and in the eyes of the people, and in the eyes of history, they
are all usurpers who — although this is quite another story — brought
great harm to the nation. Musharraf deserves punishment, as did all
military saviours before him. But if Article Six is to be invoked it
should be for Oct 12, ‘99, rather than the secondary and much smaller
sin of Nov 3, 2007. In that case it is not he alone who should be
brought into the dock but all his collaborators — the generals who
ordered troop movements on Oct 12, the judges who were effectively his
collaborators later and all those who chose to serve under him in
various capacities. Flogging Musharraf is easy because he is a dead
horse. But if we are serious about retribution our canvas has to be
broader. But since it is not going to be broad, and bringing Musharraf
to justice is likely to remain no more than a talking point — because
who wants to stir this hornet’s nest? — the more seemly thing is to move
on and confront the future and inculcate some humility in ourselves by
remembering that in the sins of the Musharraf many now counted among the
good and the great, and even the historic, were also complicit. From
such humility — or what the Chinese call self-criticism — will come the
strength to face the future, and even fix it in our favour. REFERENCE:
Writing of history or triumph of amnesia?
Ayaz Amir Friday, August 07,
2009 http://www.thenews.com.pk/TodaysPrintDetail.aspx?ID=191800&Cat=9&dt=8/7/2009
ISLAMABAD, Jan 6: Extra-constitutional steps may lead the country to bloodshed and violent revolution because the judiciary would never validate such move of any adventurer. Chief Justice of Pakistan (CJP) Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry expressed these views while speaking at the inauguration ceremony of lawyers` club and chambers in Rawalpinidi on Friday. He said on July 31, 2009 when the Supreme Court declared the dictator`s steps as unconstitutional, the judges of the apex court unanimously decided that at first they should bound the judiciary not to support the dictator at any cost. He said the rumour-mongers who were propounding unconstitutional change in the country were doing it just to have cheap popularity. He said that the judiciary had drawn the line against such change. He said that the dictator imposed Martial Law in 2007 in order to extend his rule but the valiant judiciary instead of supporting him gave a historic decision against him. He appreciated the struggle of the lawyers` community for the restoration of the judiciary and said after its restoration in March 2009, the judiciary had been facing severe problem of backlog of cases at every level from lower to the superior courts. Number of cases pending in the district judiciary was much higher than in the high courts and the Supreme Court. In this situation, the bars raised the voice of the people`s conscious and work as sentinels of their freedom. REFERENCE: Bloodshed if Constitution violated, warns CJP Right after the resignation of General Musharraf from the Post of the President of Pakistan, Mr. Athar Minallah the Chief Spokesman of the then defunct Defunct Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhary in Private Pakistani TV Channel [AAJ], demanded Treason Trial under article 6 of 1973 Constitutiuon of Islamic Republic of Pakistan while shamelssly forgetting that Athar Minallah, also served in the Musharraf cabinet for two years. Shouln’t Mr Athar Minallah be brought to Justice as well because abetting in a crime is tantamount to committing a crime. Athar was appointed Minister for Law, Local Government, Parliamentary Affairs and Human Rights by the Provincial Government of NWFP (2000-2002) by General Musharraf Military Regime. Athar Minallah joined the prestigious Civil Service of Pakistan (CSP) and after serving for 10 years left the post of Additional Collector Customs to join the firm as a partner. Athar Minallah brings not only rich taxation experience but also valuable scholastic input. Athar completed his law degree from the International Islamic University (Islamabad) and his LLM from University of Cambridge, UK. And his areas of interest are taxation, judicial review, Athar was appointed Minister for Law, Local Government, Parliamentary Affairs and Human Rights by the Provincial Government of NWFP (2000-2002). He also was the member of the Task Force constituted by the Federal Government for revamping the Taxation regime in Pakistan. Currently he is the member of the Policy Board of Intellectual Property of Pakistan and Chairman of Alternate Dispute Resolution Committee (ADRC) for Sales Tax constituted by the Central Board of Revenue.
REFERENCE: The road to hell -- and similar destinations Ayaz Amir Friday, January 01, 2010 http://www.thenews.com.pk/TodaysPrintDetail.aspx?ID=216323&Cat=9&dt=1/1/2010
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