A gathering storm

Politics are kinetic, never static, and the temperature of the political life of nations rises and falls all the time


Editorial October 21, 2016
PHOTO: EXPRESS

Politics are kinetic, never static, and the temperature of the political life of nations rises and falls all the time. Thus it is in Pakistan and the political pot is currently transiting from ‘simmer’ to ‘rolling boil’; a development that is caused by a number of factors coming into the tight end of the funnel. The catalyst for movement has been the Panama Papers, and the long-term effects of the disclosures therein are going to be profound. They are of importance because they are an undeniable truth. There has been no challenge to their veracity anywhere; they are a true record of millions of transactions over many years. They cannot be denied or wished away, raising as they do a range of questions that the family of the Prime Minister as well as the PM himself need to answer.

It is that solid factual foundation that has given motive power to the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaaf led by Imran Khan. Having failed to get through the political firewall erected by the ruling PML-N, and anyway up against a set of national and international legislation and protocols designed to protect the privacy of those making offshore investments, the PTI is taking the battle for accountability to the streets once again with November 2 being the pivotal date. The PTI has vowed to shut down governance in Islamabad, and given its capacity to draw large crowds there is a distinct possibility that it could do so.

The Supreme Court on Thursday, October 20, came to what may be a pivotal point with the issuance of notices to ‘concerned people’ including the PM essentially saying that it would not impede the PTI from exercising its democratic right to protest, but in doing so has transferred to both the PTI and the government the responsibility to ensure that any demonstration is peaceful. In all likelihood tens of thousands of people are going to descend on the capital, presenting at the very least a substantial traffic management problem. They may be there for days or weeks and given the volatility of crowds there is a reasonable expectation that there will be confrontation between the massed ranks of protesters and the forces of law and order. It is now for the Islamabad administration to work with the PTI on drafting a set of protocols that define the rules of engagement. If the PTI is to effectively manage its supporters then it needs to have a set of rules to play by, as does the administration which has to manage the city for the local population not engaged in protest and desirous of going about their daily lives unencumbered.

Whilst the right to protest has to be protected, that right does not extend to the destabilisation of governance as a whole. As in all things with rights come responsibilities. There are mechanisms, checks and balances, with parliament and the judiciary being two of the more important, that feed into the process of accountability. Both are fully functional, though parliament has become under-used of late.

It is not difficult to see the country politically at something of a crux. How events play out in coming weeks is going to determine the future character and nature of governance. The PML-N is going to have to play a different hand if it is to win the rubber, and face up to some uncomfortable realities — specifically an inquiry that focuses on the Prime Minister and his family rather than a generic and endless process that kicks the entire controversy into the long grass. There are hard choices for the PTI as well. The dharna may be spectacular and play to populist sentiments but it is not in and of itself a change agent, at least not a change agent for the better and potentially a vehicle for destabilisation and violent destructive confrontation. Pragmatism and maturity must be the watchwords on all sides. As things stand an irresistible force and an immovable object are likely to make contact, with consequences as yet unseen.

Published in The Express Tribune, October 22nd, 2016.

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COMMENTS (1)

F Khan | 7 years ago | Reply Pragmatism and maturity from khan sb.....come on?
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