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Pakistans sham referendum endorses Musharraf as president
By Vilani Peiris
7 May 2002
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Pakistani authorities have declared that last weeks referendum
has overwhelmingly endorsed General Pervez Musharraf for a five-year
term as president. The result was a transparent sham that surprised
nobody and has further discredited the military strongman who
seized power in a coup in October 1999.
According to Pakistans Election Commissioner, 44 million
or 70 percent of the countrys 63 million eligible voters
cast a vote in the April 30 referenduma huge increase on
the turnout in the last parliamentary elections in 1997 of less
than 36 percent. Of those that voted, 97.7 percent cast a yes
for Musharraf, the commissioner claimed.
The major political parties called on voters to boycott the
poll and have denounced the result as a fraud. According to their
estimates, between 5 and 10 percent of eligible voters cast a
vote. Safar Ali Shah, a spokesman for the Pakistan Muslim League
(PML) of ousted Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif described the outcome
as a naked fraud, pointing out that there has
never been a turnout in Pakistan more than 36 percent. Pakistan
Peoples Party (PPP) spokesman Razi Rabbani declared: Musharraf
has no moral and political authority to continue and he should
step down immediately.
Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) chairman Afrasiab
Khattak warned: The people were given an experience that
casts ominous shadows on their path to democratic revival.
His organisation stated: Apart from anything else the manner
in which the people were hustled into voting and the flagrant
abuse of election procedures degraded the very concept of democratic
choice.
Prominent newspapers, including the Dawn, the Nation
and the News, all questioned the credibility of the
referendum result. The Nation commented: The perception
building is that this referendum was no more credible than that
of Zia. The reference to the former dictator Zia ul Haq
is a pointed one. In 1984, Zia tried to legitimise his rule by
holding a referendumonly 5 percent of eligible voters participated
but the regime announced a huge majority in favour.
Like Zia, Musharraf called the referendum in a desperate bid
to shore up his increasingly isolated political position. In the
aftermath of September 11, he was compelled, under heavy pressure
from Washington, to break Pakistans ties with the Taliban
regime and to support the US war on Afghanistan. The decision
alienated sections of the military and Islamic fundamentalist
organisations on which Musharraf had previously relied.
Last weeks poll was a stage-managed affair from start
to finish. Musharraf spared no effort or expense to ensure a positive
outcome. Billions of rupees were spent in a propaganda blitz to
present the general as a man dedicated to the restoration of democracy,
in favour of reform and the elimination of sectarianism
and extremism. The same message was carried on the ballot
paper itselfwhich coloured the yes box green,
the colour of Islam and the Pakistani flag.
To counter the boycott and bolster the turnout, the voting
age was dropped from 21 to 18 and the number of polling stations
was increased 10-fold to nearly 87,000. The Economist commented:
As bogus political exercises go, this one was a corker.
The poll was conducted without the benefit of an electoral register,
identity cards were not obligatory and the usual polling stations
were supplemented by tens of thousands of makeshift extra ones:
in railway stations, offices, on street corners, in hotels. Business
and government outfits were leant on heavily to ensure that all
their employees voted.
There were many accounts of ballot stuffing and multiple voting.
The Independent noted: There were reports of irregularities,
with people voting more than once and only the flimsiest of identification
shown to cast a ballot. Voters were supposed to provide drivers
licences and other photo identification, but at one polling station
officials accepted a handwritten note from a woman with her name
written on it....
Many of those casting their votes were government employees
and needed little prompting to extol the virtues of General Musharraf.
In an attempt to enthuse the population, the capital, Islamabad,
has taken on a festive air in recent days with pictures of the
president bedecking buildings and attached to every lamp-post.
An army lorry adorned with flags drove along Jinnah Avenue, the
citys main thoroughfare, blaring patriotic music.
The Washington Post reported: The government took
conspicuous pains to suggest an enthusiastic outpouring for Musharraf.
In one such effort, the Information Ministry ferried a handful
of foreign reporters by helicopter to polling stations in the
North-West Frontier Province municipalities of Peshawar and Abbottabad.
At each, the scene was the same:
On the street, musicians announced the visitors
arrivaldrummer in Peshawar, bagpipers in Abbottabad. Small
children threw flower petals. Functionaries beamed. The line of
supported voters numbered about 20 or 30 souls who looked expectant,
turning to face the visitors with almost martial precision. In
Peshawar, the women dropped their veils and burst into applause.
According to Agence France Presse (AFP): Opposition
fears that the lack of an electoral roll would lead to multiple
voting and ballot stuffing were justified as many voters openly
queued up time and again to make their marks. At one station a
woman claimed to have cast a vote 60 times, while schoolgirls
well under the qualifying 18 years were seen voting at another.
The ink used to mark the fingers of voters proved to be far from
indelible. As one voter told AFP: I voted eight times as
it was not very difficult to remove the ink. I voted in different
polling stations without any problems.
The San Francisco Chronicle, reporting from the North-West
Province, stated: Evidence emerged over the course of the
day that state machinery may have influenced the results. Many
public sector workers complained they had been pressured into
casting ballots. At several polling stations, officials and police
officers were seen openly encouraging people to vote yes or opening
ballots to view the results.
Tacit support from the West
All of the above was studiously ignored by diplomats from the
US embassy and Commonwealth high commissions who conducted an
unofficial monitoring operation across the country. According
to the Sydney Morning Herald, while there were incidents
of small-scale abuse, they found no evidence of a systematic campaign
to manipulate the electoral process. Its obviously
not been rigged at an official level. There is no evidence of
widespread rigging that we found, one diplomat said.
Washington stopped short of giving a complete seal of approval
to the referendum. State Department spokesman Richard Boucher
declared: I dont think theres really any independent
verification of these figures... It is for the Pakistani people
to judge what the referendum mean in terms of returning the country
to democratic civilian rule. He then added: We look
forward to Octobers provincial and national elections. We
believe these elections are the most crucial element in returning
the country to democratic rule.
These remarks do not indicate a newfound interest in democracy
on the part of the US administration. Bush embraced the military
dictator as a convenient ally during the US war in Afghanistan
and will continue to do so in so far as Musharraf proves to be
useful. As well as maintaining a discrete distance from an obviously
rigged poll, Bouchers comments also served as a reminder
to Musharraf to toe the US line. If not, the implication was,
he could quickly find himself reduced from a leader of great
courage and conviction, as Bush described him, to political
pariah, denounced throughout the international media as an undemocratic
thug.
It appears that Musharraf understood the message. In a brief
television speech following the referendum, he pledged to implement
the economic reforms dictated by the IMF and indicated that in
the days to come a new campaign on terrorism will be announced.
Musharraf has already bowed to US pressure and allowed American
Special Forces soldiers to operate alongside Pakistani troops
along the border with Afghanistana measure that has already
triggered angry protests among tribesmen.
As far as the October elections are concerned, there are doubts
as to whether they will be held. Even if the poll does take place
and an elected government is formed, Musharraf has indicated that
he will have the final say via a military-dominated National Security
Council (NSC). He told a press conference: Power is the
power to run a government... The prime minister and the cabinet
will have that power. The NSC has the power to check misdoings...
I am just going to relax and play tennis and golf... but I will
not allow him (the prime minister) to run it badly.
Musharrafs position is, however, far from secure. In
the course of the referendum, he managed to alienate all of the
major political partieseven though the PPP and PML have
indicated a willingness to collaborate with the military regime.
He has fuelled resentment by openly siding with the US invasion
of Afghanistan and allowing US troops to operate in Pakistan.
At the same time, the implementation of IMF measures will lead
to higher unemployment and deepening social polarisation, leading
to further anti-government hostility.
The end result is that Musharraf is more isolated than ever.
His rule is based on an increasingly narrow stratum in the military
and state bureaucracy and heavily reliant on Washington for continuing
economic aid and political support. It is not a recipe for political
longevity.
See Also:
Pakistan's military ruler holds
referendum to tighten grip on power
[30 April 2002]
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