In the developed world, both civil and military bureaucracy work under the civilian leadership. In the US, military generals have to follow the orders of their civilian commander in chief, i.e., the president. The president can force any general to resign and the generals have no choice but to resign. Take the example of General Douglas MacArthur by President Harry S Truman and dismissal of two recent American generals, Stanley McChrystal and John Allen, by President Barack Obama. In Pakistan, it seems everyone is accountable except the military and superior judiciary. Both institutions believe in a self-accountability process which is contrary to the original philosophy initiated by Greek, English and French philosophers. The fourth American president, James Madison, explained the concept in four words “office should check office”, meaning one office should check the office of another.
In the recent NLC corruption case, the military top brass decided not to initiate corruption charges against three ex-army generals in the ordinary court in an ordinary manner. They set an extraordinary precedent to rehire those generals to face corruption charges in a military court in uniforms. I have not yet seen any suo-motu notice against this gross violation of the ‘due process’ clause of the Constitution. On the other hand, it was a lot easier for our Court to hang an elected prime minister by a three-four split decision on the charge of abetment to murder, for which punishment was never given before or after this case, nor was this precedent ever followed in any significant case. Again, a duly elected prime minister was romped in as a hijacker and terrorist and later sent on forced exile for 10 long years. It is also not difficult to send home a unanimously elected prime minister on contempt of court charges.
As far as parliament is concerned, no single parliament could complete its constitutional term in history under civilian leadership. All prime ministers also failed to complete their terms in office. But no military general or judge faced any litigation for what they did to the nation. In actuality, it can be argued that generals and judges had common interests and safeguarded each other. Despite the break-up of the country into two and the abrogation of all constitutions, not a single person in uniform or robe was made accountable.
The concept of judicial independence is deeply connected with the accountability of judiciary. In India, parliament can impeach the judges of the superior courts. The American political system’s judges, who are highly independent because they are appointed for lifetime, can also be impeached by Congress. No institution can be built and progress without accountability. Pakistan is probably the only nation in the world where judges appoint judges and judges remove judges. Hence, one could say there is no system of independent accountability. According to the Constitution, under Article 209, there is a Supreme Judicial Council headed by the chief justice of Pakistan and comprising other judges, which can remove a judge from his office. Only a handful of judges have so far been removed for misconduct through this process since the formation of Pakistan.
All institutions in Pakistan joined hands having common agendas or interests, except politicians. Generals and judges had a convenient marriage. There is no doubt that politicians deserved the treatment they received; they did not learn anything from history and thus, came to this pass. The military and judiciary had no sympathy for democratic values because they were not inducted through a democratic process. Moreover, they were not subjected to checks by other organs of the state.
Published in The Express Tribune, November 6th, 2012.
COMMENTS (14)
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UNITEDly they have torn the fabric of DISCIPLINE as it was part of their FAITH.
@zohaq In case of the generals with respect to NLC Scam, the 'crime' was committed when the generals where in service and not retired.
All institutions in Pakistan joined hands having common agendas or interests, except politicians.
Really..??
The only 'common agenda' i see them (politicians) joining hands is looting Pakistan - looting it by bending laws, looting it by manipulating democracy itself.
It is quite clear from this article that our constitution NEEDS to be amended further or rewritten altogether. Judges and Generals should be accountable to the PUBLIC because they are PAID by the public taxes.
"Command over military requires moral athurity which unfortunately our politicians lack. You want civilian control over military, the only way to do is to choose honest people to power."
@Love: for that reason honest politicians like B. Bhutto are seen as a mortal threat and not allowed to reach or exercise power; if they attempt to do so, they are neutered or exterminated. The way out is to accept that the military should be a subordinate institution, period, and that rule-of-law replace the "moral authority" of rule-BY-law.
This requires changes in thinking at the grass-roots level: people have to draw the difference between oppressive laws and those that are useful for good governance, and accept that the democratic process is more important that the stature of the people holding office in the military and government.
Hey, it's election day in the U.S. - the day we Americans decide whether our temps should remain in office another few years. I know what I'm talking about!
Civilian ascendancy is inevitable - the generals understand this well. Their desperate actions to delay the inevitable are just a natural human tendency when the 'inevitable future' is less desirable than then the comfortable status quo. Kind of like the inevitable death not preventing us from trying everything to extend life. Kayani's speech yesterday is a healthy sign that the generals are finally beginning to feel the heat. Imagine what the dinosaurs must have felt 65 million years ago when the climate started changing.
@Love: "Command over military requires moral athurity which unfortunately our politicians lack. You want civilian control over military, the only way to do is to choose honest people to power."
India's politicians are also corrupt. OF course we would also prefer that they were clean but sadly we are stuck with the current lot. This does not mean that we want to also create another self goal by letting military become an institution by itself rather than firmly under civilian control. These are just excuses provided by military sympathizers in Pakistan for continued resistance to civilian control.
@Sabi: Why look at US - just 6 months back the then COAS V K SIingh asked for a meeting with PM Manmohan Singh. PM declined the meeting by saying, please convey your concerns through your boss - the defence minister.
One of the constitution article stipulates that parliament members should possess good character, reputation and not involved in moral turpitude. SC is pursuing graft charges against the president this is enough proof of the president reputation that sitting SC pursuing swiss graft cases & that makes the president out of the office as per constitution. Is this clause applied?
Command over military requires moral athurity which unfortunately our politicians lack. You want civilian control over military, the only way to do is to choose honest people to power. Like the Turkish prime minister did control the army with people support because he credible.
If the retired generals are tried in a military court on any pretext or gimmick and the apex court remains mute spectator it will signal that the generals are above law..
I watched on television once US Army chief,standing on president Bush's right side,with president Bush extending his right hand on general's shoulders and talking to newsmen saying 'my general'.That showed complete command of civilion on generals.Can we immagine any thing like that in Pakistan.Generals avoid to attend official gatherings with Prime minister so as not to salute to Prime minister.
The article is absolutely on the mark. Generals accused of corruption should be tried under due process in ordinary lower courts like other citizens. In this case the generals are retired, that is to say that they are civilians who are accused of criminal acts in a civilian capacity. Why should they be treated any differently to other civilians? This is plainly another criminal act. Why are the courts silent?
If there were no civilians in Pakistan, she could reach its true potential!