Burlesques Known
as Referendums
Sreeram Sundar Chaulia
“Sometimes, my military urge
does come in…”
Pervez
Musharraf in an interview to The Hindu, April 1 2002
Referendums in Pakistan make interesting contributions to the
world of art, often producing memorable portraits and
larger-than-life caricatures. Among the array of colourful posters
displayed before the just-concluded referendum to extend Pervez
Musharraf’s Presidency for the next five years, one in Lahore
stands out. The General, decked in olive green fatigues, straddles
across a stallion with raised forelegs, wields a Pakistani flag
doubling up for a Praetorian baton in his left arm, and uses his
partly visible right arm to hold the reins.
Without a
doubt, it reminds me of the famous drawing of Napoleon Bonaparte
in all his military finesse and glory, egging on his favourite
Spanish steed, Marengo, to cross the Alps on an inveterate
conquest mission. Like Napoleon, Musharraf sports a faint smile
that conveys charm and gentility amidst virile settings. Like
Napoleon, Musharraf seems to be riding the symbolic Pakistani
horse to some idyllic rosy future. And like Napoleon, Pakistanis
and the world are being shown glimpses of Musharraf as a
benevolent despot-cum-military genius, a wielder of the right
mixture of warrior and statesmanlike qualities. But to every
thoughtful eye, the Caesarist splendour and aggressive masculinity
in the poster unwittingly summarise the grotesque charade and
circus this referendum to “strengthen democracy” is about.
The
Lahori poster artist who painted Musharraf’s Napoleon imitation is
among several hundred commissioned by the government’s propaganda
machine in the run-up to the April 30th referendum, an
event that cost the country’s emaciated exchequer about $500
million. But then, any price to “strengthen democracy” is
affordable. Zulfi Bhutto would rather his people eat grass than
forego the nuclear option and Pervez Musharraf surely does not
mind some costly investment towards ensuring his legitimacy! The
makings of a megalomaniac dictator begin with the assumption that
self-perpetuation is equable to the country’s progress and
development, which is
exactly what this referendum is about: Musharraf’s baby step on
the way to anointing himself President-for-life.
Let me
take a leaf out of Pakistani history to illustrate this
contention. In December 1984, General Zia-ul-Haq, whose 1977
coup de tat promised “restoration of democracy” in 3 months,
announced a referendum on his Islamising policies entailing his
continuation as head-of-state for another 5 years. According to
official observers, 62 percent of voters participated of which
97.7 percent voted to extend Zia’s tenure. International media and
domestic political parties denounced it as an “unprecedented
fraud” in which only 5 percent of the eligible electorate voted.
This turnout figure is important since instead of casting a
negative vote and invoking the wrath of the army, those opposed to
the President’s plans opted to stay at home. Regardless of the
fraud, Zia happily proceeded to conduct legislative elections on a
“non-party basis” (a feature borrowed from General Ayub Khan’s
“partyless democracy” of 1965) and installed a puppet Prime
Minister, Muhammad Khan Junejo.
Technically, martial law ended with Junejo’s arrival, but Zia
wisely kept sections of the constitution dealing with fundamental
rights suspended and promulgated new amendments mandating, “the
President’s orders made since the 5th of July, 1977,
shall not be altered, repealed or amended without the previous
sanction of the President.” In other words, Junejo was a lame duck
in the most positive sense and a marionette in the most negative.
Surely, Zia would argue in the imperious style of Louis XIV, when
the people had given him a 99.7 percent ‘Yes’ in the referendum,
"I am the State.” In the words of Zia’s Chief of Staff, Mahmud
Arif, his boss felt that “the parliamentary form of government
neither suited the psyche of the people of Pakistan nor promoted
the concept of Islamic unity… He was especially worried about the
possibility of a woman being head of state and head of government
in an Islamic state.” (Working with Zia, p.225). The
referendum thus provided the fictional legal basis for
totalitarianism, repression and an unparalleled lovefest of
theology and state.
A closer
examination of the conditions of the Zia referendum is called for
at this juncture. The General’s campaign meetings in all four
provinces registered heavy attendance because the local
administration ensured it. According to journalist Mushahid
Hussain, Zia affectionately referred to the grassroots bureaucracy
and local self governing institutions who bused people to the
rallies as “my army.” (Pakistan’s Politics: The Zia Years
p.156). Two days before the referendum, an unreasonably insecure
Zia passed a law waiving the national identity card requirement
for voting so that his cronies could commit massive rigging. A
cell manned by the Joint Chief of Staffs was cobbled up at the
last moment to provide “administrative support” to the Chief
Election Commissioner. Not to leave any chance to the wind, the
question of the referendum touched on religious sensitivities so
that many illiterate people would assume they were being asked to
affirm their belief in Allah, not Allah’s crusader-soldier
Zia-ul-Haq.
And yes,
there were posters and broadsheets in 1984 too, advertising Zia as
the most pious Muslim the world has ever seen and proudly adding
captions that when the General was a student in St. Stephen’s
College, Delhi, he used to excuse himself from class to dutifully
perform namaz at appointed hours, five times a day!
What are
the lessons of history for the present that can be deduced from
the flashback to Zia’s referendum?
One,
Musharraf’s referendum is an organised jamboree high in thuggish
entertainment value and low in substance. It has been widely
reported that polling officers are pre-stamping ballot papers all
over the country to meet the state-set quota of ‘Yes’ votes. Five
million public sector employees complain that they had been forced
to vote on Tuesday and police inspectors throughout the country
have been commissioned to forcibly open ballot boxes to check
“malpractices.” Musharraf might as well have conducted the
referendum on the first day of April (All Fools Day) rather than
the last to drive home this tragic practical joke carried out in
the name of democracy.
Two,
Musharraf’s ‘victory’ presages a clampdown on political opponents
and popular forces and puts his promise of conducting free and
fair elections in October of this year in the backburner. With the
contrived ‘Yes’ vote backing his martial spirits, Musharraf will
now proceed to conduct a third “partyless election” in Pakistani
history and install another puppet like Junejo. Imran Khan is
playing his cards well by supporting the referendum and he could
well be the Man Friday Musharraf wants as rubber stamp Prime
Minister.
Three,
the process of state-building as opposed to nation-building will
intensify and submerge sane voices that call for sustainable
justice in Pakistan and peace with India. The crackdown on
sectarian terrorists may proceed haphazardly, but under the guise
of eliminating extremism, a general assault on anti-militarist
dissent, freedoms of speech and expression will ensue. Army
corruption and mismanagement of the economy, courtesy skyrocketing
defence expenditure, will also follow and further the process of
de-institutionalisation of civilian structures.
Four,
and this is of most relevance to Kashmir, just as Zia felt
“greatly assured by his success in the referendum” (Arif) and
launched Operation Topac, Musharraf will feel emboldened to claim
he is implementing his people’s wishes in aiding and abetting the
“freedom struggle” across the border. The killings in J&K will
double and infiltration will proceed with impunity. If the
Americans butt in and demand that religious terrorism and Jihad
against India be curbed, Musharraf will innocently throw up his
hands in the air and say, “Sorry. My people, who chose me as
President in the referendum, have the ‘core issue’ in their blood
and will never allow me to cease assistance to the mujahideen.”
Coupled with the melting snows in the valley, Musharraf’s
referendum win will make Kashmir the most dangerous spot on earth,
not in the Clintonian sense with nuclear connotations, but in the
human sense with a reign of terror tinged in the blood of
minorities and pro-India Muslims.
Why did
the world not act to dissuade Musharraf from this referendum which
has so many catastrophic connotations? I asked former US
Ambassador to Pakistan, Thomas W. Simons, why the United States is
sweeping the referendum under the carpet and parrying
uncomfortable questions on it. Should not America have used its
leverage gained over Pakistan in the last 5 months to ensure that
genuine democracy was established? Simons agreed it is
“unfortunate” that Musharraf is going down the Zia lane, but then
disagreed that Washington could do much about it since “Pakistan
is a sovereign country and we can only offer friendly advice.”
What Simons did not say was that he would much rather prefer a
vile dictator once close to Osama bin Laden than a democratically
elected politician as an ally in the selective ‘war against
terrorism.’ If it is really respect for non-interference in the
internal affairs of a sovereign country, much of US foreign policy
since World War II is a mirage. Ask Hugo Chavez of Venezuela!
To
conclude, the April 30th referendum is a mockery of
democracy and an encore of long-established patterns of political
deceit in Pakistan. Musharraf’s changeover from a four star
General’s uniform to a sherwani should hold good in content
and form, but like Zia, it will be a shallow costume alteration.
While there are limits to the Musharraf-Zia parallel (Musharraf is
not Punjabi; Bhutto was hanged, Nawaz Sharif granted exile;
Musharraf is not a religious fanatic of Zia’s calibre; Musharraf’s
referendum comes only 1 ½ years after his coup etc.), it cannot be
forgotten that the current Pakistani tyrant belongs to Zia’s
militarist ideation system and shares rabid anti-India
proclivities. It cannot be forgotten that a la Zia,
Musharraf is an American ‘ally’ who fights terrorism on his
western border and fuels it on his eastern border. It cannot be
forgotten that referendums to buoy commandos are burlesques. It
cannot also be forgotten that commandos who bastardise instruments
of democracy lack the moral and legal authority to champion
plebiscite and referendum in Kashmir.
[Sreeram Sundar
Chaulia studied History at St.Stephen’s College, Delhi, and took a
Second BA in Modern History at University College, Oxford. He
researched the BJP’s foreign policy at the London School of
Economics and is currently analyzing the impact of conflict on
Afghan refugees at the Maxwell School of Citizenship, Syracuse,
NY.] |