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Pakistan: US-backed military regime mounts new wave of repression
By Vilani Peiris
23 May 2005
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Scores, possibly hundreds, of activists of Benazir Bhuttos
Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) remain in detention after a
massive crackdown launched last month by the US-backed military
regime of Pervez Musharraf.
Some of the PPP detainees are facing charges under Section
7-A of Pakistans Anti-Terrorism Act. Yet their only crime
was to seek to organize peaceful anti-government protests.
In a statement issued last Wednesday, PPP Senator Mian Raza
Rabbani and Naheed Khan, the political secretary of PPP Life Chairperson
Benazir Bhutto, accused the government of trying to stifle the
opposition with a view to rigging local body elections planned
for this summer.
The attack on the PPP is part of a wider campaign of repression.
The speaker of the National Assembly, the lower house of Pakistans
parliament, warned this week that legislators who criticize Musharraf
for serving as both president and chief of Pakistans armed
services could be barred from participating in the assembly. On
May 3 police attacked journalists who were marking World Press
Freedom Day with a demonstration outside the prime ministers
official residence. According to a report in the Dawn,
the police attack all but turned press freedom day into
a police freedom day and was probably the roughest-ever
physical handling of the press in Islamabad.
A demonstration mounted by human rights activists May 14 to
draw attention to the lack of womens rights in Pakistan
and the governments failure to stand up to the religious
rights attempt to impose rigid sexual segregation was broken
up by police, with several dozen protesters manhandled and arrested.
Recently the Punjab provincial government responded to a mob attack,
led by an Islamic fundamentalist legislator, on a mens and
womens marathon by proscribing further mixed sports events.
Forcibly preventing participation in public events by
women can only act to encourage extremism, and send a message
to orthodox elements that their actions are condoned by the state,
declared the non-governmental Human Rights Commission of Pakistan,
in a statement deploring the police attack on the May 14 protest.
Following a longstanding practice of the Pakistani military,
the Musharraf regime has actively promoted the Islamic fundamentalist
right as a bulwark against the working class and the traditional
ruling class parties, most notably Bhuttos PPP and the section
of the Pakistan Muslim League that has remained loyal to the elected
prime minister whom Musharraf deposed, Nawaz Sharif.
The Muttahida Majlis-i-Amal (MMA), an alliance of six Islamic
parties which has been able to garner increased support by appealing
to popular opposition to the US occupations of Afghanistan and
Iraq, has repeatedly come to the aid of Musharraf, most infamously
in December 2003, when it helped secure parliaments adoption
of a series of constitutional amendments that legitimized Musharrafs
1999 coup and his remaining president, with significantly augmented
powers, until 2007.
Many of the PPP activists were detained a month ago, when Pakistani
security forces took tens of thousands of PPP members and leaders
into custody so as to prevent an April 16 rally to welcome Bhuttos
husband, Asif Zardari, on his return to the country. Others were
arrested May 4, when the police mounted a second wave of arrests
to prevent the PPP from mounting a march the next day from the
Lahore High Court to the Punjab governors house.
The state repression against the PPP points to the authoritarian
character of the Musharraf regimea regime the Bush administration
has repeatedly praised for its contributions to the war on terrorism
and commitment to building democracy. As the Asian director of
Human Rights Watch said in an April 20 statement, Democracies
dont use force to prevent peaceful gatherings.
The mass arrests also underscore the increasing nervousness
of Musharraf and the civilian government that he and the Pakistani
military have constructed from defectors from the PPP, the Muslim
League of Nawaz Sharif, and other members of the countrys
business and political elite.
Musharraf is rightly seen by broad sections of the Pakistani
people as a pliant ally of the Bush administration in its policy
of neo-colonial aggression in the Middle East and Central Asia.
The policy reversals Musharraf has been compelled to make by Washington,
including withdrawing support for the Taliban regime in Afghanistan
and opening peace talks with India, have also rankled much of
the countrys elite, because they cut across their traditional
interests and ambitions.
Musharraf and his prime minister, former Citibank official
Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz, routinely boast that Pakistans
economy is taking off. But it is widely conceded in the press
that the privatization and retrenchment policies of the regime
have resulted in growing poverty and social inequality and that
these have been compounded in recent months by a spurt in inflation,
which is currently running at an annual rate of more than 10 percent.
In an attempt to shore up his rule, Musharraf has for months
been conducting secret negotiations with the PPP leadership. Bhutto
and Zardari have reputedly offered to endorse the general remaining
president for two more years in exchange for his agreeing to the
staging of new elections this year, rather than in 2007.
To facilitate a reconciliation, the authorities arranged for
Zardari, who faces a number of corruption and other criminal charges,
to be released last November on bail after eight years in jail.
Then they permitted him to leave the country to visit his family
and consult with Bhutto, who, for fear of herself being hauled
before the Pakistani courts on corruption charges, has taken up
residence in Dubai.
But even if the PPP leadership has bent over backwards to demonstrate
its readiness to deal with Musharraf and repeatedly affirmed that
the military is the bulwark of the Pakistani state, so isolated
is the regime that it dare not allow the PPP to make any public
display of its popular support.
To thwart the April 16 PPP welcome rally for Zardari, the Punjab
provincial government, which is led by the pro-Musharraf Pakistan
Muslim League Quaid-e-Azam (PML-Q), invoked Section 144 of the
Criminal Procedure Code. Designed by the British colonial authorities,
Section 144 makes gathering of four or more persons illegal.
Beginning on April 14, large numbers of PPP leaders and party
workers were taken into police custody. More than 25,000 police
and paramilitary forces were mobilized in Lahore, the capital
of the Punjab and the countrys second largest city, to detain
PPP activists. Travel in much of the country was disrupted, as
all trains to Lahore were cancelled, flights diverted and the
Punjabs borders temporarily sealed.
The government admits that 5,000 people were taken into custody,
including many PPP National Assembly members and provincial legislators.
Other accounts put the number of arrests in the tens of thousands.
Zardari, who was himself briefly taken into custody on his arrival
at Lahore airport, told the BBC that as many as 70,000 PPP members
had been detained and that a significant number were physically
abused. PPP provincial assemblywoman Azma Bokhari was so badly
roughed up she had to be admitted to hospital.
The legislators and other top PPP leaders were released in
the days immediately after April 16. But this has not put an end
to the incarceration and harassment of PPP supporters.
The government crackdown has been condemned by the entire opposition,
including the MMA. In a rare show of anti-government unity, all
opposition legislators walked out of the Senate April 22 to protest
the attack on the PPP.
The PPP leadership has contrasted the repression of its welcome
rally for Zardari with the hands-off approach the government took
to a recent million man series of rallies the MMA
held to demand that Musharraf give up at least one of his two
key state posts.
While there is no doubt that the government has frequently
given a boost to the MMA, the PPP is no more capable than the
Islamic right of mounting a consistent and genuine popular struggle
against the Musharraf regime. The PPP looks to the military to
defend the property and privileges of the ruling elite against
Pakistans toiling masses and appeals to the US and other
imperialist powers for support in loosening the militarys
grip on political power.
If Bhutto and Zardari have not come to a deal with Musharraf,
it is because the general fears parting with any real measure
of power and because his plans to cut a deal with the PPP have
triggered a quasi-revolt in the ranks of his own court
party, the pro-military PML (Q).
Speaking two weeks after the beginning of the anti-PPP crackdown,
Zatdari tried to put some distance between himself and the military
regime, saying the PPP had no interest in gaining power through
the backdoor. But his comments pointed to the true
rule of the PPP as a party that uses populist appeals to garner
mass support, but speaks for a section of the Pakistani bourgeoisie.
According to the Dawn, the PPP leader said the establishment
people were in a mess and the PPP wanted to open for them
a door out of this situation.
See Also:
Pakistan: amid mounting crises,
Musharraf twists and turns
[30 January 2005]
Bush lauds Pakistani
strongman as he tightens his grip on power
[13 December 2004]
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