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Gunbattles in Karachi
Pakistani president seeks to drown mounting opposition in
blood
By Vilani Peiris
14 May 2007
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Karachi, a city of 10 million and Pakistans commercial
hub, was convulsed by gun-battles Saturday, as Pakistans
US-backed military strongman, President Pervez Musharraf, resorted
to deadly violence in a bid to quash the growing popular challenge
to his rule.
According to press reports, at least 36 people were killed
and more than 140 injured when thugs allied with the Muttahida
Qaumi Movement (MQM), a pro-Musharraf party, attacked crowds gathering
to show support for the countrys suspended Chief
Justice, Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry.
In March, Musharraf moved to have Chaudhry stripped of his
post as head of Pakistans Supreme Court on trumped-up corruption
charges. Chaudhry, like the rest of Pakistans top judges,
has a long record of giving a judicial fig-leaf to Musharrafs
anti-democratic and unconstitutional actions, including the 1999
coup in which he seized power. But Chaudhry recently issued a
number of rulings, including striking down the privatization of
Pakistan Steel Mills, that cut across the governments agenda
and caused Musharraf to conclude he could not rely on Chaudhry
to provide a judicial blessing for his stage-managed re-election
as president later this fall.
On the evening of Friday, May 11, the MQM blockaded the main
arteries into Karachi with trucks, buses, and containers. The
next morning thousands of MQM activists armed with sticks roamed
Karachis streets warning lawyers, who had invited Chaudhry
to address the Sindh High Court Bar Association, and opposition
activists, who were intending to greet the suspended chief justice,
to stay in their homes.
But with all the major opposition partiesincluding the
Pakistan Peoples Party, the Pakistan Muslim League, the
Awami National Party and the six-member alliance of Islamic fundamentalist
parties (the MMA)endorsing the call to greet Chaudhry, thousands
took to the streets in defiance of the MQM threats and a massive
mobilization of security forces.
An AP reporter says he saw MQM supporters firing at crowds
of protesters from buildings in Karachis Golden Town district
and some among the anti-Musharraf demonstrators firing back. A
second major clash, including an exchange of gunfire and the setting
ablaze of buses and motor vehicles, occurred at Malir Hal, where
Musharraf opponents came face to face with those on the way to
an MQM-counter rally.
Although the authorities had mobilized some 16,000 security
personnel, they did nothing to stop the MQM attacks. Some newspapers
are reporting that the security personnel were specifically ordered
not to intervene. A low-ranking policeman told the Daily Times,
There were some orders and our weapons were taken from us.
It was as if we were put here just to watch.
Over the past two months security forces have repeatedly roughed
up journalists covering protests against Musharrafs attempt
to oust Chaudhry. On Saturday, MQM thugs assumed this role. The
private Aaj television channel showed pictures of its office under
fire. Journalist Talat Hussain told BBC, We are under attack.
We have seen no security force. No one has come to help us.
As intended, the violence forced Chaudhry to abandon his plan
to speak before the Sindh High Court Bar Association. After waiting
in an airport lounge for nine hours, he returned to Islamabad.
The MQMs counter-rally, however, went ahead unimpeded.
The MQM, which has a long history of political violence, claims
to represent the mohajirs, Urdu-speakers who moved to Pakistan
from north India when the subcontinent was divided on communal
lines in 1947-48. It controls Karachis city government and
is part of pro-Musharraf coalition governments nationally and
in Sindh, the southern province of which Karachi is the capital.
By contracting out the bloody suppression of Saturdays
protest in Karachi to the MQM, Musharraf hopes to be able to deny
responsibility and avoid bringing further public opprobrium on
the military.
But this is a transparent ruse.
Speaking from behind a massive bullet-proof enclosure to a
government rally in Islamabad Saturday evening, Musharraf laid
full blame for the bloody events in Karachi on the opposition,
while holding up the MQMs rally as evidence of the popular
support for this regime.
Musharraf claimed to be shocked and grieved by the numbers
of dead and wounded, then proclaimed, But what has happened
today in Karachi is because of the chief justice who went there
ignoring the advice of the government over the issue.
The president, who doubles as head of Pakistans armed
forces, then made a thinly-veiled threat of further violence,
saying that the gun-battles in Karachi were the result of the
obstinacy of the opposition. If they think they are powerful,
then they should know that the peoples power is with us.
Musharraf also made an appeal to Pakistans lawyers, who
have spearheaded the protests over Chaudhrys suspension.
In a reference to the governments recent reversal of its
opposition to the suspended chief justices demand that the
Supreme Court as a whole hear the corruption allegations against
him, Musharraf declared, Now that the full court will be
deciding the issue, the lawyers fraternity should stop protesting
and stop playing into the hands of some disgruntled and unwise
people.
Musharrafs speech was also significant in that he confirmed
that he intends to have the legislators now sitting in Pakistans
provincial and national assemblies re-elect him to a five year-term
this fall, even though these legislators were chosen in an election
in 2002 that was manipulated by the military. Such a procedure
is in flagrant violation of the constitution as is Musharrafs
continuing to serve as both president and Chief of Pakistans
Armed Services.
Musharraf said, After a few months, I will be contesting
for the second term in office and then [i.e. after he has been
returned as president] the elections of the national and provincial
assemblies will be held.
Musharraf denied press reports that he will soon declare a
state of emergency, claiming that the people are with him. But
on Sunday, Interior Secretary Syed Kamal Shah was reported to
have said that the government has authorized paramilitary troops
to shoot anyone involved in serious violence. The Sindh government,
meanwhile, has invoked an old British colonial statute, Section
144, to ban all political gatherings.
Washington has said nothing about last weekends violence
in Karachi. But in recent weeks, top Bush administration officials
have voiced strong support for Musharraf and lauded him as a staunch
US ally in the war on terror and a democrat.
The strength of the protests against Musharrafs attempt
to sack the chief justice took the opposition by surprise. While
the opposition parties have for years been promising to mount
a final struggle against the Musharraf regime, they
all in fact have an ambivalent relationship with Musharraf and
Pakistans military. The opposition parties are terrified
that a confrontation with Musharraf could provide an opening for
the entry of Pakistans toiling masses into political struggle.
The MMA remains the government of North West Frontier Province
and in a coalition government with the pro-Musharraf PML (Q) in
Baluchsitan. Benazir Bhutto, the PPPs leader for life, has
recently publicly admitted that she is involved in backroom talks
with the government aimed at reaching an accommodation with the
Musharraf. As part of these maneuvers, the PPP leadership had
been holding meetings with International Republican Institute,
an arm of the US Republican Party.
See Also:
Pakistan: Will Bhuttos
PPP come to Musharrafs rescue?
[16 April 2007]
Protests mount against Musharraf
attempt to sack Pakistans chief justice
[19 March 2007]
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