|
Citizens,
State and Society support efforts to Achieve and Maintain Law and Order in Karachi
Picture showing the Pakistan Rangers
(Sindh) during the raid on Nine-Zero on March 11, 20151
The Pakistan Rangers’
(Sindh) 'siege and search operation' on Nine-Zero, the Muttahida Quami
Movement’s (MQM) Headquarters in Karachi,2 on March 11, 2015
signaled the civil-military leadership’s resolve to effectively tackle
the persistence of criminal and terrorist violence pulverizing Karachi for at
least the past two decades.3 Therefore, when the Prime Minister stated
on March 25, 2015 that 'Karachi would be made a crime-free city and the
operation would continue to achieve the objective'4 and the
COAS on February 16, 2015 that 'Peace in Kci [Karachi] means prosperity
for Pak [Pakistan]', it seems that the 'meaningful effort'5
the latter called for has finally arrived; and none too soon.
Karachi, apart from being the
hub of Pakistan’s financial and economic activities, has experienced all
forms of violence, including ethno-political, militant, sectarian and criminal.
According to data released by the Sindh Police and the Rangers, 2013 was the
bloodiest year for Karachi 'with 2,700 people killed and crime soaring past
40,000 reported incidents.'6
Achieving and maintaining law
and order across Pakistan, especially in Karachi is of crucial importance to
Pakistan. That it is done in a decisive and comprehensive manner, with a swift
and above-board approach is the need of the hour. Pakistan’s citizens,
State and society stand firmly behind this effort and its successful conclusion.
PILDAT recognizes and lauds the decision to finally tackle all ‘non-state
actors’ under the National Action Plan, especially in context of Karachi’s
law and order problems and hopes that the operation will be taken to its 'logical
conclusion'.7
Karachi operation may be a good
example of civil-military cooperation but such an extended role of the armed
forces in the domestic law and order situation is counter-productive. Democratic
Government should develop a system of governance, like the rest of the civilized
world, in which civilian institutions should be able to govern equitably without
any pressure, influence or manipulation. A police force free from any partisan
political influence is the basic ingredient for such a system. Recruitment,
postings, transfers, promotions should all be based on merit. Not only the maintenance
of law and order but also the investigation of crimes and effective prosecution
of the accused should improve within a specific deadline.
Anatomy
of the Karachi Crackdown: Imbalance in Civil-Military Law Enforcement Agencies
While extending its full support to it, PILDAT
believes that the anatomy of the Karachi Operation tells a telling tale about
civil-military relations at play in the city; more specifically, about the prominence
and primacy of the Pakistan Rangers (Sindh), and the apparent inability of the
Sindh Police to deal with the crisis on its own. This denotes a clear imbalance
between the civil and military Law Enforcement Agencies (LEAs) operating in
Karachi, sadly resulting from the passive approach that successive Provincial
Governments have adopted in increasing the effectiveness of the Police force
by making its operations independent of political considerations. PILDAT believes
that this ostensible incompetence and the resultant reliance on Pakistan Rangers
(Sindh) does not augur well for civilian capacity to maintain law and order,
once achieved, and an undue burden on Military and paramilitary forces of Pakistan.
Although Article 7(b) of The
Pakistan Rangers Ordinance, 1959 states that 'the Force [i.e. the Pakistan
Rangers] shall reinforce the Police for the maintenance of law and order whenever
it is necessary',8 the paramilitary force (whose personnel are
contributed by the Pakistan Army and was originally created for border security),
since its deployment in Sindh during the late 1980s, has become the face of
crackdown against violence in Karachi, with the Police Service of Sindh ironically
acting as an auxiliary outfit.
It has been seen on numerous
occasions that whenever a wave of violence hits the city, the successive Provincial
Governments have made decisions to further empower the Pakistan Rangers (Sindh),
rather than affecting any systematic reform in the Police. Nothing could be
more illustrative of this than the Operation Clean-up in 1992, Operation Blue
Fox from 1994-1996, the spate of violence in July 2011, the operation launched
by the PML-N Government in September 2013, etc., which saw Rangers spearheading
the crackdown, with the Police assisting.9
Here, the Supreme Court’s
judgment on the law and order situation in Karachi (Suo Moto case no. 16
of 2011) is a damning indictment on the state of the Police force. While
referring to the statement recorded by the then IGP Sindh, the judgment10
notes that:
The IGP conceded that
30-40 percent of police force are non-cooperative either for the reasons that
they have secured their appointments on political considerations or they have
associated themselves with different groups including political parties, having
vested interests in the affairs of Karachi, therefore, at times it becomes
very difficult for him to effectively take action against the real culprits.
Experts believe that years of
politically-motivated postings and transfers by the Provincial Government have
decapitated the Police force. The result has been years of neglect of the law
and order situation in Karachi, with the Pakistan Rangers (Sindh) being called
in to clean up the mess.
The Provincial Government of
Sindh must immediately adopt the Police Order of 2002 to depoliticize the institution,
ensure professional training of its members, and recruitment based on merit
to make it competent enough to discharge its duties without requiring the assistance
of the Pakistan Rangers (Sindh). PILDAT’s report titled Police, Politics
and the People of Pakistan can also be consulted for more details on relevant
reform proposals and the state of Pakistan’s Police service. 11
PILDAT also notes that the Pakistan
Rangers (Sindh) will have to tread a fine line, especially while conducting
operations against the militant wings of various political parties, during the
operation. Mr. Altaf Hussain’s somewhat belligerent response to the Rangers’
raid on the MQM headquarters, which many perceived to be a threat to members
of the force,12 underscores the resistance that the security apparatus
might face in the course of its actions. Maintaining an apolitical approach
and targeting all non-state actors, across the board, in Karachi, and for that
matter in the entire province and the country is of utmost necessity, and will
add to the prestige and image of the Pakistan Rangers (Sindh). An FIR has been
lodged against Mr. Altaf Hussain for his threatening remarks against the Pakistan
Rangers (Sindh) on national television.13 Such past pronouncements
by Mr. Hussain were generally ignored, consequently compromising the rule of
law. PILDAT believes that the law should equally and effectively apply to everyone,
no matter how powerful or politically influential that individual or group
may be.
Mr.
Saulat Mirza’s ‘Confession’: A Development Shrouded in Ambiguity
A screen grab from Mr. Saulat Mirza’s
‘Confession’ video that surfaced on March 18, 2015
Events unfolding in Karachi in the aftermath of
the MQM headquarters raid took a new turn when a ‘confession’ video
of Mr. Saulat Mirza emerged late on March 18, 2015, hours before his execution,
in which he alleged involvement of senior MQM leaders including Mr. Altaf Hussain
and Mr. Babar Ghauri in the murder of the former Managing Director of Karachi
Electric Supply Company (KESC) – now renamed as Karachi Electric.14
As if the surfacing of the video was not befuddling by itself, the Federal Government
asked the Sindh Government to form a committee to investigate Mr. Saulat Mirza’s
allegations.15 However, the committee formed by the Home Minister
for Balochistan, Mr. Sarfraz Bugti, MPA, to investigate how the video was recorded
from the jail cell has been dissolved. 16
These developments further compound
the ambiguity and suspicion surrounding the whole affair, leading to several
questions and concerns:
- How was the video possibly recorded even though
the Pakistan Prisoners Code prescribes such strict guidelines for prisoners
on death-row? PILDAT believes that the cancellation of the inquiry into this
severely affects the rule of law, and sets a negative precedent.
- By whom was the video recorded and circulated? Till
the time any conclusive investigation points otherwise, the primary suspects
will remain the intelligence agencies, whether the civilian or the military.
- The Federal Government has directed the Sindh Government to investigate
Mr. Saulat Mirza’s claim. In order to allow the investigation to reach
a logical conclusion, the execution may be deferred if required. Article 164
of the Qanun-e-Shahadat Order, 1984 states that 'In such cases as the
Court may consider appropriate, the Court may allow to be produced any evidence
that may have become available because of modern devices or techniques'.
DG
Rangers’ and Corp V Commander’s Briefing to the Prime Minister:
Chief Minister Sindh Conspicuous by his Absence
Picture shows the Prime Minister; Chief Minister
of Sindh, Syed Qaim Ali Shah, MPA; Corp V Commander, Lt. Gen. Naveed Mukhtar;
DG Pakistan Rangers (Sindh), Maj. Gen. Bilal Akbar during a meeting at Faisal
Airbase, Karachi on March 25, 201517
The Chief Minister of Sindh, Syed Qaim Ali
Shah, MPA, was conspicuous by his absence at a briefing given by the Corp V
Commander, Lt. Gen. Naveed Mukhtar and DG Pakistan Rangers (Sindh), Maj. Gen.
Bilal Akbar to the Prime Minister ‘on the status of ongoing operation
against terrorists and criminals’ at the Faisal Airbase, Karachi
on March 25, 2015.18 The Press Release issued by the Prime Minister
Office further stated that ‘after the briefing Chief Minister Sindh,
Syed Qaim Ali Shah also joined [the meeting]’. 19
The Chief Minister has been present
at all the meetings on the ongoing operation chaired by the Prime Minister in
Karachi but he was either not invited or he decided not to attend this particular
briefing. The development raises two questions of relevance:
-
PILDAT believes that the
Prime Minister should have been more sensitive to the Chief Minister’s
exclusion as the Chief Minster is the chief executive of the province and
his absence can raise questions about the effectiveness of his position
and of the operation.
-
Regardless, does not the
Chief Minister’s absence apparently imply that he is not trustworthy
enough to be included in briefings about the security situation in the province?
Is this not implicitly a national security hazard?
Rehabilitation
and Reconstruction of the Tribal Areas: Is the Elected Government Missing in
Action?
Prime Minister distributing ration
to a person displaced due to operations in the tribal areas as the COAS, Gen.
Raheel Sharif; Chief Minister Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Mr. Pervaiz Khattak, MPA;
and Governor Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Sardar Mehtab Khan Abbasi, look on 20
According to a media report, as the first phase
of the repatriation of people displaced due to Military operations in the tribal
areas specifically in the North Waziristan Agency (NWA) has begun,21
the Military leadership has 'asked for more funds for the process as the
originally estimated cost of rehabilitation and reconstruction is expected to
cross the Rs. 75 billion mark'.22
That the repatriation of the
displaced people and the rehabilitation of the tribal areas by the Military
have become major areas of focus is shown by the two meetings held between the
civil-military leadership on the issue during the month of March 2015: one between
the ‘second-tier’ of the concerned Military leadership and the Federal
Minister for Finance, Senator Muhammad Ishaq Dar, on March 11, 2015;23
the second between the Prime Minister, the Federal Minister for Finance, and
the COAS on March 19, 2015 at the Prime Minister House during which 'matters
related to the return of Temporarily Displaced Persons …. came under discussion'.
24
Sadly, the request for increased
funding creates the impression that the Pakistan Army is mainly spearheading
the reconstruction and rehabilitation work in the affected areas and the role
of the civilian government is limited to mobilizing the financial resources.
PILDAT, while noting the development projects undertaken by the Army in FATA
in the Civil-Military Relations Monitor for November 2014,26 stated
that 'apart from ensuring the rehabilitation of the displaced 69,021 families
due to Operation Zarb-e-Azb, the Government must also rehabilitate the socio-economic
and administrative landscape of the region, especially along the lines of the
Comprehensive Response Plan outlined in the National Internal Security Police,
2014 – 2018'.
The Federal Government has made
commendable efforts at raising funds at various international forums such as
the Multi Donors Trust Fund, the Donors’ Conference,27 etc.,
for the displaced people, but socio-economic rehabilitation of the affected
areas has largely been left to the Pakistan Army.
Although the Pakistan Army’s
role in reconstructing and rehabilitating war-affected areas (South Waziristan
and Swat) is appreciated, the elected Government would also do well to involve
the FATA Secretariat in this effort,28 and also activate the FATA
Disaster Management Authority, and the FATA Development Authority. The elected
Government’s lack of involvement in the rehabilitation and reconstruction
of Swat after the Operation Rah-e-Nijat should not be repeated.
Wither
the NSC? 'High level' consultations on the Middle East
Although the month of March 2015 saw the civil-military
leadership meeting twice (on March 26, 2015 and March 30, 2015) to discuss 'the
recent developments in Middle East',29 it is regrettable that
the trend of not using the forum of the National Security Committee for the
purpose continued.
It seems that the Government
has completely abandoned the NSC, and has instead resorted to using ad-hoc forums
such as the Apex Committees for security policy formulations. There is a need
to institutionalize decision-making in national security affairs, and follow
certain protocols in civil-military relations, for which the NSC was created.
Additionally, a critical review and revision of the National Security Committee’s
decision-making role (compared to a consultative or a facilitative one) and
its membership of the heads of the Armed Forces, both of which are an anomaly
compared to other such forums globally, is needed.
Premier
– COAS Interactions
The Prime Minister, COAS, Gen. Raheel Sharif;
the Prime Minister’s Advisor on National Security and Foreign Affairs,
Mr. Sartaj Aziz; the Federal Minister for Defence, Khawaja Muhammad Asif, MNA;
the Federal Minister for Finance, Senator Muhammad Ishaq Dar; Chief of the Air
Staff, Air Chief Marshal Sohail Aman; the acting Chief of Naval Staff Vice Admiral
Khan Hasham bin Saddique, and Secretary, Foreign Affairs during a meeting at
the Prime Minister House on March 30, 2015.30
For the month of March 2015,
the Prime Minister and the COAS interacted face-to-face for a total of three
times:
-
The first meeting between
the two was held on March 19, 2015 at the Prime Minister House to discuss
'matters relating to the return of Temporarily Displaced Persons and
raising of additional FC wings for the security of western borders/FATA'.
Apart from the Prime Minister and the COAS, the Federal Minister for Finance,
Senator Muhammad Ishaq Dar, also attended the meeting.31
-
Both met for the second time
when the Prime Minister called a meeting at the Prime Minister House to
discuss the situation developing in Yemen. According to the Press Release
issued by the Prime Minister Office, the Federal Minister for Defence,
Khawaja Muhammad Asif, MNA; Advisor to the Prime Minister on National
Security and Foreign Affairs, Mr. Sartaj Aziz and Chief of the Air Staff,
Air Chief Marshal Sohail Aman, also attended the meeting.32
-
The Prime Minister and the COAS met for the third
time when the former called another meeting at the Prime Minister House
'to undertake a comprehensive review of the prevailing situation in
the Middle East'. The meeting was also attended by Federal Minister
for Finance, Senator Muhammad Ishaq Dar; Federal Minister for Defence,
Khawaja Muhammad Asif, MNA; Advisor to the Prime Minister on National
Security and Foreign Affairs, Mr. Sartaj Aziz; Chief of the Air Staff,
Air Chief Marshal Sohail Aman; the acting Chief of Naval Staff Vice Admiral
Khan Hasham bin Saddique, and Secretary, Foreign Affairs. 33
The Federal Minister for Defence, Khawaja Muhammad
Asif, MNA was present in two out the three meetings.
1. Picture courtesy the Daily
Times, February 19, 2015.
2.
For details, please see One dead, several injured as Rangers raid MQM headquarters,
the Express Tribune, March 11, 2015, as accessed on April 01, 2015 at:
http://tribune.com.pk/story/851291/rangers-conduct-siege-and-search-operation-at-mqm-headquarters-in-karachi
3.
For details, please see Rangers raid MQM HQ in Karachi, many arrested,
Pakistan Observer, May 12, 2015, as accessed on April 01, 2015 at:
http://pakobserver.net/detailnews.asp?id=260636
4.
For details, please see the Prime Minister’s Office Press
Release on March 25, 2015, titled We will soon restore peace in Karachi: PM,
as accessed on April 01, 2015 at:
http://pmo.gov.pk/press_release_detailes.php?pr_id=876
5.
The DG ISPR on behalf of the COAS issued the statements at the occasion of the
meeting of the Provincial Apex Committee of Sindh, also attended by the Prime
Minister; Governor Sindh, Mr. Ishrat-ul-Ibad Khan; Chief Minister Sindh Syed
Qaim Ali Shah, MPA; and former President, Mr. Asif Ali Zardari. For details,
please see the tweet issued by the DG ISPR, Maj. Gen. Asim Saleem Bajwa on February
16, 2015, which can be accessed at:
https://twitter.com/AsimBajwaISPR/status/567255978844770304
6.
For details, please see Karachi 2013: the deadliest year of all, the Express
Tribune, January 06, 2014, as accessed on April 01, 2015 at:
http://tribune.com.pk/story/653889/karachi-2013-the-deadliest-year-of-all
7
'Logical conclusion', an oft-heard phrase heard from the civil
and military, denotes the culmination of the various measures being taken to
tackle terrorism and violence in the country. For example, the tweet issued
by the DG ISPR on March 22, 2015 on behalf of the COAS, Gen. Raheel Sharif,
stated that the ‘COAS reaffirmed Army determination to take ops [operations]
to logical concl [conclusion]. Ts [terrorists] squeezed in isolated pockets
pkts [pockets] be targeted with precision 4 [for] elimination’. The tweet
can be accessed at:
https://twitter.com/AsimBajwaISPR/status/579573131574145024
8.
For details, please see the complete text of The Pakistan Rangers Ordinance,
1959, which can be accessed at:
http://punjablaws.gov.pk/laws/106.html
9.
Following the spate of violence in Karachi in July 2011, which
saw almost 300 people die within a span of days, the Provincial Government of
Sindh made a decision to extend the Rangers’ jurisdiction to the affected
areas of the city along with conducting overnight raids. For details, please
see Karachi violence, over 100 dead, the Express Tribune, July 09, 2011, as
accessed on April 01, 2015 at:
http://tribune.com.pk/story/205202/karachi-violence-live-updates
Also see Nisar says Karachi operation to start in two days, Dawn, September
05, 2013, as accessed on April 01, 2015 at:
http://www.dawn.com/news/1040496
10.
The
Judgment further goes on to state that ‘It came to light during hearing
of the case that in police force many police officers have been recruited on
political considerations who have managed to occupy such posts for extraneous
considerations and senior officers in the rank of SSP, SP and DSP etc., have
been inducted into the force from other organizations without following any
rules and even they have not undergone training for the purpose of policing’.
The complete text of the Supreme Court’s Suo Moto case no. 16 of 2011
can be accessed at:
http://www.supremecourt.gov.pk/web/user_files/File/SMC16of2011_detailed_judgment.pdf
11.
The complete report can be accessed at the PILDAT website at the following link
Police,
Politics and the People of Pakistan
12.
On March 12, 2015, during an interview to Mr. Shahzeb Khanzada of Geo Television,
Mr. Altaf Hussain stated that ‘Jin afsaraan nay meray ghar pay chhapa
mara, who Ragers kay afsaaran thay – woh thay’.
13.
For details, please see Rangers file case against MQM chief, Dawn,
March 17, 2015, as accessed on April 01, 2015 at:
http://www.dawn.com/news/1170171
14.
For details, please see Saulat Mirza’s ‘Confession’, Dawn,
March 20, 2015, as accessed on April 01, 2015 at:
http://www.dawn.com/news/1170692
15.
For details, please see Sindh asked to form Committee investigate
Sualat’s allegations, the Express Tribune, April 01, 2015, as accessed
at:
http://tribune.com.pk/story/862241/sindh-asked-to-form-body-to-probe-saulats-allegations
16.
For details, please see Govt. dissolved committee probing Saulat Mirza’s
death-cell video, Dawn, March 25, 2015, as accessed on April 01, 2015 at:
http://www.dawn.com/news/1171809
17.
Picture courtesy Dawn, March 25, 2015
18.
For details, please see the Press Release issued by the Prime Minister’s
Office on March 25, 2015, titled We will soon restore peace in Karachi: PM,
as accessed on April 01, 2015 at:
http://pmo.gov.pk/press_release_detailes.php?pr_id=876
19.
Ibid.
20.
Picture courtesy Pakistan Today, June 27, 2014
21.
For details, please see IDP repatriation to North Waziristan to
begin on March 31, Dawn, March 28, 2015, as accessed on April 01, 2015 at:
http://www.dawn.com/news/1172449
22.
For details, please see Displaced tribesmen: Army seeks more rehabilitation
funds, the Express Tribune, March 12, 2015, as accessed on April 01, 2015 at:
http://tribune.com.pk/story/851858/displaced-tribesmen-army-seeks-more-rehabilitation-funds
23.
Ibid.
24.
For details, please see the Press Release issued by the Prime Minister’s
Office on March 19, 2015, titled COAS calls on the PM, as accessed on April
01, 2015 at: http://pmo.gov.pk/press_release_detailes.php?pr_id=863
25.
According to a Press Release issued by the Ministry of Finance on March 21,
2015, titled Minister of Finance reviews rehabilitation measures for TDPs, flood
affectees, the Federal Minister for Finance, Senator Muhammad Ishaq Dar was
informed that ‘the process [for repatriation of the IDPs] had already
started and that the Government had released Rs 1.5 billion for cash transfers
to the returnees’. The Press Release can be accessed at:
Minister
for Finance reviews rehabilitation measures for TDPs, flood affectees
26.
PILDAT’s monitor on Civil - Military Relations for the month of November
2014 can be accessed at:
http://www.pildat.org/Publications/publication/CMR/MonitorOnCivil-MilitaryRelationsinPakistan_Nov012014_Nov302014.pdf
27.
For details, please see World Bank assures support for development, Dawn, April
03, 2015, as accessed on April 03, 2015 at:
http://www.dawn.com/news/1173558/world-bank-assures-support-for-development
28.
The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Governor, Sardar Mehtab Khab Abbasi in November 2014
created a Rehabilitation and Reconstruction Unit under the Directorate of Projects,
FATA Secretariat. However, no follow up on the work of this Unit has surfaced
subsequently. For more details, please see Body being created for FATA rehabilitation,
Dawn, November 06, 2014, as accessed on April 01, 2015 at:
http://epaper.dawn.com/DetailImage.php?StoryImage=07_11_2014_181_009
29.
For details, please see the Press Release issued by the Prime Minister’s
Office on March 26, 2015, titled PM chaired a high level meeting here this evening
to discuss the recent developments in the Middle East, as accessed on April
01, 2015 at: http://pmo.gov.pk/press_release_detailes.php?pr_id=878
30.
Picture courtesy The Daily Patriot, March 30, 2015
31.
For details, please see the Press Release issued by the Prime Minister’s
Office on March 19, 2015 titled COAS calls on the PM, as accessed on April 01,
2015 at: http://pmo.gov.pk/press_release_detailes.php?pr_id=863
32.
For details, please see the Press Release issued by the Prime Minister’s
Office on March 26, 2015, titled titled PM chaired a high level meeting here
this evening to discuss the recent developments in the Middle East, as accessed
on April 01, 2015 at: http://pmo.gov.pk/press_release_detailes.php?pr_id=878
33.
For
details, please see the Press Release issued by the Prime Minister’s Office
on March 30, 2015, titled PM chairs high level meeting to review situation in
the Middle East, as accessed on April 01, 2015 at:
http://pmo.gov.pk/press_release_detailes.php?pr_id=883
|
|