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Ominous
Banners Appear in the Heart of the Provincial Capital
The banner, courtesy of the Traders of Circular Road, Lahore,
is displayed at the Charing Cross, outside of the Provincial Assembly of the
Punjab building (seen in the background)
The banner, displayed in full
glare in front of the Provincial Assembly of the Punjab at Mall Road, Lahore,
contained the following text:
“(30) baras pehlay
jin siyasatdanon kay gharon main choolha nahin chalta tha, jo chotay motay aik
karkhanay ya cinema kay malik thay, aaj woh kharbon-pati kaisay ban gayay? Dehshatgard
madrassay kee chat kay neechay ho ya siayasat kee chattri talay, mazhabi dehshat
gardion kay khilaaf kamyabiyon kay baad lutairon, qabza groupon, aur bhatta
khoron kay khilaaf Zarb-e-Azb jari rahay gi. Zardari Sahib, ab eent say eent
inhi ki bajay gi.
Kadam barhao Raheel Sharif
– qaum tumharay saath hai”
Translation
"How have the politicians, who were barely able to make ends meet thirty
years ago, become billionaires now? Whether the terrorist operates under the
Madrassa, or under the patronage of politics, after the success against religious
terrorism, Zarb-e-Azb will continue against plunderers, land mafia and extortionists.
Zardari Sahib, these are the people who will be destroyed completely.
Take a step forward, Raheel
Sharif. The nation stands with you."
The text of the banner indicates
that it was probably motivated by the reaction to Mr. Zardari’s speech
of June 16, 2015 in which he had apparently criticised the Military. However,
it is extraordinary and a sign of times that the businessmen (the core constituency
of the PML-N) in a city that is the home town and power base of PML-N, Prime
Minister Nawaz Sharif and Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif are pinning hopes of
combatting crime on the Army Chief and openly asking him to ‘take a step
forward’ and not the Provincial or Federal Governments and their leaders.
This is a part of the emerging trend in which the COAS is presented as the ‘saviour’
and the elected Governments, Prime Minister and the Chief Minister are almost
marginalised.
Mr.
Asif Ali Zardari’s Fiery Broadside
Mr. Asif Ali Zardari during his fiery speech made on
June 16, 2015 1
If one thing defined civil-military relations in Pakistan in
June 2015, it was perhaps the fiery speech made by the Co-Chairman of the PPP
and former President of Pakistan, Mr. Asif Ali Zardari on June 16, 2015. The
diatribe, which is almost unconventional for Mr. Zardari’s usually passive
demeanour, was openly critical of the Military, as he warned it against ‘stepping
out of its domain’.2
PILDAT believes that the renewed
vigour observed in the Karachi Operation during the past few months has created
several ruptures in the civil-military seams, especially in Sindh. At least
two political parties, the MQM and the PPP, appear to be facing the brunt of
the operation. It is perhaps for the very same reason that the two are reportedly
seeking a political alliance again, with Mr. Zardari also reaching out to other
political parties.
Relevantly, Mr. Asif Ali Zardari
in speech on June 16, 2015 stated that:
“Hamari kardaar-kashi
karna chorr doh. Agar hum nay apki shuru ki, toh pata nahin Pakistan bannay
say aj tak kitnay jarnailon [Generals] ki shuru ho jayay gi. Main nahin
chahta kay institution hamaray kamzor hon. Iss liay kay hamain pata hai kay
kitnay courton main case chal rahay hain, aur kitnay chalnay walay hain jiss
main apkay paitee bhai, woh accused hain. Unki list lay kay jiss din hum nay
press conference ki, toh apki eent say eent baj jayay gi. Iss waqt poori dunya
main jab ap kamzor ho rahay ho, hum apkay shaana bashaana kharray rehna chahtay
hain … Yeh hamara institution hai. Ap nay sirf 3 saal rehna
hai. Uss kay baad apnay chalay jaana hai. Hamesha kay liay hum nay rehna hay.
Toh humain mutt tang karo. Agar humain tang karnay ki koshish kee toh hum apki
ki bhi eent say eent baja dain gay … Hum iss waqt, jab aik sarhad
peh apko Bharat nay lullkara hua hai, doosri sarhad pay apko kuch kaladam tanzeemon
nay lullkara hua hai, jin k peechay bhi RAW hai, Balochistan main apko RAW nay
lullkara hua hai aur saath main kuch baloch sardaron kay bachon ko rakha hua
hai. Toh hum apko kamzor nahin karna chahtay. Toh hoshyaar, hoshyaar, hoshyaar,
hoshyaar!”
Translation: ‘Stop
with our character assassination. If we start with yours, then no one knows
the number of Generals that may be implicated, since the formation of Pakistan.
I do not want to weaken our institutions because we know there are cases pending
in court, along with others that might be introduced in which your colleagues
are accused. The day we do a Press Conference on the basis of that list, you
will be destroyed. We want to stand besides you as you are being weakened…
This is our institution. You will stay for only three years, while we will be
here forever. Therefore, do not vex us. If you try doing that, then we will
destroy you… We do not want to weaken you at this time when on one frontier,
you are facing challenges by India, on the other by some proscribed organisations
supported by RAW [Research and Analysis Wing], along with the challenges it
has posed for you in Balochistan in collusion with the children of a few Baloch
sardars. Therefore, beware, beware, beware, and beware’ !
Yet again, Mr. Asif Ali Zardari
in his evasive style did not directly refer to any person or institution in
the speech. However, with allusions to security challenges that the country
is facing, and the resultant ‘weakening’ of the institution, it
is clear that he is addressing the Military leadership.
Such criticism of the Armed Forces
by a person who had been President / Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces
and whose party rules a Province at a time when we are in a state of war is
irresponsible, to say the least. Mr. Zardari or the representatives of the Sindh
Government should have raised it at appropriate forum such as the apex committee.
Additionally, Mr. Zardari should be giving out facts and constitutional references
if he chooses to go public on an issue as serious as this rather than going
for an emotionally charged tirade. Mr. Zardari’s party, instead of endorsing
his tirade, should have held him accountable for irresponsible utterances. 3
Perhaps displaying the ‘twice
shy’ syndrome in the aftermath of
its posture following the assassination attempt on Mr. Hamid Mir, the Federal
Government’s quick criticism of Mr. Zardari’s speech provides yet
another window into the complex nature of our present-day equation of civil-military
relations. That the Prime Minister cancelled his pre-scheduled meeting with
Mr. Zardari after the latter’s outburst could have been enough of a signal
of him distancing himself from Mr. Zardari’s views. However, in a very
curious fashion, Mr. Sharif, the elected Prime Minister of Pakistan, especially
called the Chief of Army Staff, who was on a visit to Russia at the time, 4
to reportedly convey personally to the Army Chief his distancing from Mr. Zardari’s
“criticism of the armed forces.”
The statement issued from the
PM House, quoting Mr. Sharif, went on to even credit the “coordination
between the civilian and military leadership” to have “strengthened
democracy” in Pakistan:
“Coordination between
the civilian and military leadership has strengthened democracy. This harmony
is evident in the decisions taken by the All Parties Conferences (APC) during
which the civilian and military leadership set joint national targets.5”
Raid
on the Sindh Building Control Authority (SBCA) Office: Are the Pakistan Rangers
(Sindh) ‘Acting Beyond their Authorities’?
Office of the Sindh Building Control Authority (SBCA) was
raided by the Pakistan Rangers Sindh on June 15, 20156
Saying that the Pakistan Rangers’ ‘raid’ on
the office of the Sindh Building Control Authority (SBCA) and Lines Area Development
Project (LADP) on June 15, 2015 ruffled a few feathers within the Sindh Government
will be an understatement.7
Director General of Pakistan
Rangers (Sindh) based in Karachi, Maj. Gen. Bilal Akbar’s presentation
to the Apex Committee Meeting on June 04, 2015 had already delineated land grabbing
and ‘China-cutting’ as two sources for funding of the terror-nexus
prevalent in Karachi. With the dubious flight from the country of the SCBA’s
previous Director General, Mr. Manzur Qadir, the SBCA and LADP appear to be
in the front and centre of the alleged land grabbing in Karachi.
However, the letter written by
the Chief Minister of Sindh, Syed Qaim Ali Shah, MPA, to the Director General
of Pakistan Rangers (Sindh), Maj. Gen. Bilal Akbar, on June 17, 2015 showed
that the Sindh Government had decided to take exception to the raids conducted
by the Rangers. It stated, “It has been reported that the offices
of SBCA and LARP were raided on June 15 and the officers were harassed, waylaid
and also mishandled. This reflects that the Rangers are acting beyond their
authorities and mandate. It is therefore advised to restrict your movement as
per the authority given to you”.8
The development raises two questions
of relevance, especially with regards to the role that Pakistan Rangers (Sindh)
have acquired in law enforcement in Sindh:
-
What are the powers available
to Pakistan Rangers (Sindh) in the law enforcement dynamics of the province?
-
Where exactly did the Pakistan
Rangers (Sindh) break the protocol, prompting the Chief Minister to write
the letter?
Although the answer to the first
is not patently clear, it is obvious that the raid on the Sindh Building Control
Authority (SBCA) was the catalyst for the letter. As for the powers available,
the letter makes a specific reference to ‘clause 1 of subsection 3,
of section 4 of the Anti-Terrorism Act, 1997’9 to highlight
the powers given to Pakistan Rangers (Sindh),10 although prima
facie, the said provision defies the position of the Sindh Government.
The response given by Maj. Gen.
Bilal Akbar to the letter is also worthy of consideration. During a media talk,
he stated that the raid had been based ‘on intelligence that a suspect
named Yasir is running a network of terrorism in there [the SBCA Office]’.
During the same interview, he stated that the Pakistan Rangers (Sindh) were
authorized to undertake targeted operations like Sindh Building Control Authority
(SBCA) under powers vested by the Apex Committee, headed by the Chief Minister
of Sindh, Syed Qaim Ali Shah, MPA, who issued the letter in the first place.11
However, as PILDAT has already
noted in its Monitor on Civil-Military Relations in Pakistan for January 2015,
the legal standing of the Apex Committees, specifically as a decision-making
forums, remains in question. No official notification was circulated by either
the Federal or the Provincial Governments regarding their formation and the
citizens remain in the dark about their terms of reference, composition, etc.12
The Civil Armed Forces, including
the Pakistan Rangers (Sindh) have been assigned the role of policing and prosecution
of ‘enemy aliens’ and ‘combatant enemies’,
which ostensibly the suspect named Yasir at the SBCA may qualify as, under the
Protection of Pakistan Act, 2014.13 It has also been seen in the
past that the Pakistan Rangers (Sindh) have been given policing powers on multiple
occasions by the Provincial Government, rather than affecting any systematic
reform in the Police Service of Sindh. The Civil Armed Forces have, therefore,
become a crucial part of the law enforcement landscape in Sindh, considering
their presence in the role for the past 20 years.
Holistically, the result of these
apparently contradictory statements will be a compromise on the effectiveness
of the Karachi Operation, which saw a renewed vigour in June 2015. It contributes
not only to the civil-military friction observed in Sindh during the recent
months, but also exacerbates the impression of a confused State and its various
institutions in cracking down against the terrorist nexus persistent in Karachi.
Rs.
230 Billion and the Terrorist Nexus in Karachi
In an apparent indictment of the civilian administration in Sindh,
a Press Release issued by the Pakistan Rangers (Sindh) on June 11, 2015 alleged
that annually a total of Rs. 230 billion was collected through illegal means
in Karachi.
The statements declared the ‘District
Government, District Administration, construction companies, estate agents and
police officials’ to be complicit in the racket.14 The
Press Release was based on a presentation by Director General Pakistan Rangers
(Sindh), Maj. Gen. Bilal Akbar, during a meeting of the Apex Committee of Sindh
on June 04, 2015, chaired by Chief Minister of Sindh, Syed Qaim Ali Shah, MPA.
The development signifies yet
another public statement, critical of the Sindh Government, issued by the Military
leadership with regards to the Karachi Operation. It came on the heels of the
speech made by Corp V Commander, Lt. Gen. Naveed Mukhtar on May 16, 2015, encapsulating
the Military leadership’s concerns about performance of the Sindh Government
vis-à-vis law and order situation in the province.15 The weeklong
lapse between the presentation at the Apex Committee meeting, and the Press
Release issued on its basis was a cause of perplexity for many observers. However,
some clue for the delay may be furnished by a Report published in The News that
stated:
“In the last apex committee
meeting [i.e. on June 04, 2015], the Chief Minister had agreed to constitute
a Committee to look into the allegations regarding involvement of ministers,
politicians, bureaucrats in serious financial crimes, which directly or indirectly
contribute to terrorism and other grave crimes. However, after the Chief Minister
had consulted his party leadership, it was decided not to proceed against Ministers,
politicians and senior members of the bureaucracy on the basis of Rangers’
complaint”.16
Given that this was indeed the
case, it unfortunately signifies that the existing forums for civil-military
interaction in Sindh, and their effectiveness have significantly been exhausted.
The Press Release issued patently belies frustration on the part of the Military
leadership with regards to the Sindh Government stalling the formation of a
Committee to investigate the allegations.
A Committee was finally formed
by the Sindh Government, upon orders of the Chief Minister, on June 12, 2015.
However, for many observers, it is nothing more than an eyewash as the committee’s
independence is questionable on account of its very composition which consists
of two hand-picked former (not serving) members of the Judiciary, and the Home
Secretary of Sindh (who reports to the Home Minister and the Chief Minister
and hence cant be expected to be a part a quest which may embarrass the Chief
Minister or his Cabinet colleagues and party comrades. 17
PILDAT believes that adequate
internal mechanisms already exist within the Sindh Government to hold those
accountable that committed the crimes mentioned in the allegations levelled
by the paramilitary force. Considering that the Pakistan Rangers (Sindh) have
given a precise amount of Rs. 230 billion collected through illegal activities,
it implies that sufficient evidence may already exist to carry out an effective
prosecution. This should indeed be the course adopted by the Sindh Government
rather than the formation of a Committee to apparently hoodwink not only the
various institutions involved, but also the populace, also leading to a critical
waste of the Government’s time and resources.
Growing
International Role of the COAS
COAS calling on the Sri Lankan President, Mr. Maithripala
Sirisena on June 08, 201518
The developments of June 2015 further indicate the continuation
of the developed international role of the COAS. The highlight for June 2015
in this regard was the COAS’ three-day visit to Sri Lanka that lasted
from the June 06-08, 2015. The culmination of his visit was the meeting with
the Sri Lankan President, Mr. Maithripala Sirisena, on June 08, 2015. Apart
from Mr. Sirisena, the COAS also met the Sri Lankan Prime Minister, the State
Minister for Defence, the Secretary of Defence, the Chief of Defence Services,
and Commander of the Sri Lankan Air Force.19
According to the media reports
and Press Release issued by the ISPR, Pakistan’s Ambassador did not accompany
the COAS to Sri Lanka during his meeting with Sri Lanka’s civilian leaders.
It remains a cause of concern not only for the distorted civil-military equation
in Pakistan, but even from the perspective of good statecraft, that the country’s
envoys in foreign nations visited by the COAS are not represented in the latter’s
interaction with civilian leadership of the foreign governments.
With each passing day, the Chief
of Army Staff, Gen. Raheel Sharif, appears to be in the front and centre of
Pakistan’s international diplomacy initiative. Whether it can be merely
described as “close coordination” in Prime Minister Sharif’s
words,20 or a crafty ‘division of labour’ resulting out
of the alleged “deal” between the Premier and the Army Chief, 21
perhaps no conclusive facts may ever be available. However, while this apparent
trend may appear to be serving short-term gains of either office holders, it
is questionable how these developments will cast their shadow in the long run
on the strength, maturity and character of its institutions.
No
Meeting of the National Security Committee – Yet again!
It has been observed each month that as new security related
challenges arise, the current elected Federal Government fails to utilize the
National Security Committee, a forum of its own creation.
Consider, for instance, only
the list of defence-related challenges observed during the month of June 2015:
-
First and foremost, increased
friction was observed in Pakistan-India relations, as the rhetoric was significantly
kicked-up between the two.
-
The onslaught against the
MQM’s top leadership took a particularly sensitive turn as the BBC
report surfaced on June 24, 2015, alleging that the MQM had received Indian
funding, along with holding regular interactions with India’s Research
and Analysis Wing (RAW).22
However, even though June 2015
saw the Prime Minister and the COAS interacting twice, no meeting of the NSC
was held. It is worth remembering that the latest meeting of the NSC was held
on October 15, 2014, nearly 8 months ago, while the institution has met for
a total of four times since its formation on April 22, 2013.
In a country beset with more
than its fair share of security-related issues and crises, the lack of utilisation
of institutions formed with the intent speaks volumes about the style of governance
and handling of crises by the elected Federal Government.23
Premier
– COAS Interactions
During the May 2015, the Prime Minister and the COAS met
twice. 24
During the month of June 2015, the Prime Minister and COAS official
met twice.
-
The first meeting between
the two was held on June 23, 2015 as the COAS called on the Prime Minister.
During the meeting, ‘It was decided that operation against criminals
and terrorists would continue unhindered across the country to optimally
utilize the environment created due to phenomenal successes of Zarb-e-Azb’.25
-
The second meeting was held
on June 30, 2015 during which ‘Operation Zarb-e-Azb as well as
return, rehabilitation and resettlement of Temporarily Displaced Persons
(TDPs) came under discussion’.26
The Federal Minister for Defence,
Khawaja Muhammad Asif, MNA was not present in either of the two meetings held
during month.
References:
1. Picture courtesy
daily Dawn
2. For details, please see Zardari cautions
military establishment for ‘stepping out of domain’, Dawn, June
17, 2015, as accessed on July 02, 2015 at:
http://www.dawn.com/news/1188576
3. While the comments in the media by the
PPP Vice President Senator Sherry Rehman essentially said that Mr. Zardari’s
statement referred to former Military dictators,, a press release emanating
from the party’s Central Executive Committee meeting held on June
17, 2015 stated that “taking notice of media comments on the co-chair’s
remarks made at a party event where only one part of the speech was emphasized
repeatedly. The meeting decided that it is important for all institutions
to work within their mandated constitutional parameters.” As accessed
on July 9, 2015 at:
https://mediacellppp.wordpress.com/2015/06/17/ppp-central-executive
-committee-resolution
Additionally, Mr. Qamaz Zaman Qaira, a senior member of the PPP stated that
‘PPP had strong reservations about role of the Army but always respected
it’.
For details, please see the tweet issued by the PPP’s Media Cell on
June 18, 2015, as accessed on July 09, 2015 at:
https://twitter.com/MediaCellPPP/status/611507788301205505
4. For details, please see PM, COAS agree
to continue operation against terrorists and criminals, The News, June 24,
2015, as accessed on July 02, 2015 at:
http://www.thenews.com.pk/Todays-News-13-38210-PM-COAS-agree-to-continue
-operation-against-terrorists-criminals
5. For details please see Nawaz cancels Zardari
meeting after anti-military outbursts, Dawn, June 17, 2015, as accessed
on July 02, 2015 at:
http://www.dawn.com/news/1188745
6. Picture courtesy The Express Tribune
7. For details, please see Rangers raid SBCA
office over illegal construction in Sindh, The News, June 15, 2015, as accessed
on July 02, 2015 at:
http://www.thenews.com.pk/article-188107-Rangers-raid-SBCA-office-over-illegal-
construction-in-Karachi
8. For details, please see Overstepping boundaries:
CM tells Rangers to stay within its mandate, Express Tribune, June 18, 2015,
as accessed on July 02, 2015 at:
http://tribune.com.pk/story/905400/overstepping-boundaries-cm-tells-rangers-
to-stay-within-its-mandate
9. Ibid.
11. For details, please see DG Rangers says
authorized to take actions like SCBA, Samaa TV, June 18, 2015, as accessed
on July 02, 2015 at:
http://www.samaa.tv/pakistan/18-Jun-2015/dg-rangers-says-has-power-
to-take-actions-like-scba
12. The publication can be accessed at:
http://www.pildat.org/Publications/publication/CMR/MonitorOnCivil-Military
RelationsinPakistan_Jan012015_Jan312015.pdf
13. For details, please see the PILDAT publication
titled Legislative Brief, Protection of Pakistan Act, 2014, which can be
accessed at:
http://www.pildat.org/publications/publication/LB/PILDATLegislativeBrief20_
ProtectionofPakistanAct2014.pdf
14. According to the Press Release, these
illegal activities include extortion, land-grabbing, smuggling of Iranian
diesel and illegal water supply, and ‘China-cutting’. For details,
please see Over Rs. 230 billion collected in Karachi annually: DG Rangers,
Geo TV, June 11, 2015, as accessed on July 02, 2015 at:
http://www.geo.tv/article-187689-Over-Rs.230-billion-illegally-collected-in
-Karachi-annually-DG-Rangers
15. For details, please see the PILDAT publication
titled Monitor on Civil-Military Relations in Pakistan, May 2015, which
can be accessed at:
http://www.pildat.org/Publications/publication/CMR/MonitorOnCivil-Military
RelationsinPakistan_May012015_May312015.pdf
16. For details, please see War of nerves
between PPP and establishment, The News, June 12, 2015, as accessed on July
02, 2015 at:
http://www.thenews.com.pk/Todays-News-2-323188-War-of-nerves-between-
PPP-and-establishment
17. For details, please see Sindh govt. forms
Committee to probe Rangers’ terror-funding claims, Dawn, June 13,
2015, as accessed on July 02, 2015 at:
http://www.dawn.com/news/1188002
18. Picture courtesy the ISPR
19. For details, please see the Press Release
issued by ISPR on June 08, 2015, as accessed on July 02, 2015 at:
https://www.ispr.gov.pk/front/main.asp?o=t-press_release&id=2907
20. For details please see Nawaz cancels
Zardari meeting after anti-military outbursts, Dawn, June 17, 2015, as accessed
on July 02, 2015 at:
http://www.dawn.com/news/1188745
21. For details, please see Pakistan Army
Chief Holds Off Generals Seeking PM's Ouster, Reuters, September 05, 2014
at Voice of America:
http://www.voanews.com/content/reu-pakistan-army-debate-prime-minister-
nawaz-sharif-ouster-protests/2439957.html
22. The complete report can be accessed at:
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-33148880
23. While supporting the need for a body
of consultation on national security decision-making, and acknowledging
the need for consulting Military in Pakistan’s national security decisions,
PILDAT has maintained that a review of the decision-making role of the NSC
is required. The details of the proposed reform can be accessed in the heading
The National Security Committee: A Dormant Institution? On page no. 13 of
the PILDAT publication titled Monitor on the Quality of Democracy in Pakistan;
June 01, 2014-May 31, 2015, which can be accessed at:
http://www.pildat.org/Publications/publication/Democracy&LegStr/Monitor
QualtiyofDemocracyinPakistan2ndYearoftheFederalandProvincialGovernments
_June01_2014_May31_2015.pdf
24. Picture courtesy Pakistan Today
25. For details, please see the Press Release
issued by the Prime Minister Office on June 23, 2015, titled PM meets Chief
of Army Staff, which can be accessed at:
http://pmo.gov.pk/press_release_detailes.php?pr_id=1055
26. For details, please see the Press Release
issued by the Prime Minister Office on June 30, 2015, titled Prime Minister
meets Chief of Army Staff, which can be accessed at:
http://pmo.gov.pk/press_release_detailes.php?pr_id=1061
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