Ambiguities of the 18th amendment

Enhancement by the 18th Amendment is limiting the provinces’ jurisdiction to legislate and power to execute...


ABID MUSTIKHAN January 12, 2015
The writer is a former project director and deputy managing director of Saindak Copper Gold Project

Historical happenings determine the future, therefore, it is necessary to go back in history to understand the present. If historical facts are negated, the future becomes bleak and history becomes unforgiving, and punishes when denied. Historically, Pakistan is not a devolved state. It is a state formed on free will of independent and sovereign nations under agreements. The Lahore Resolution of 1940 guaranteed that the federating units were to be absolutely autonomous and sovereign; a resolution was passed in 1943 in the Sindh Assembly deciding accession to Pakistan. Similarly, Balochistan’s accession was by a conditional agreement between the Quaid-e-Azam and the Khan of Kalat in 1948. This agreement concedes only certain subjects to the centre i.e., customs, defence and foreign affairs and the rest were to remain with the province. The 1940 Resolution and this agreement should have formed part of the Pakistan’s Constitution.

The 18th Amendment is a relocation of subjects and cannot be considered a practice in devolution; the eventual power centre rests with the federal government. The concurrent list has not been abolished fully as only certain conditions pertaining to this list have been changed. The same ministries at the federal level also exist in the provinces. The role and presence of the federal government in Balochistan is a dominating one, especially with reference to law enforcement, control over natural resources and deciding political and security issues. The provinces of Balochistan and Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa conditionally endorsed the 1973 Constitution with a promise that the concurrent list will be completely abolished within a period of 10 years, but that has never happened.

Article 158 of the Constitution says that the province has the first right to consume and meet its requirements of oil and gas before it is transmitted to the other provinces, whereas according to Article 172-3, the share of the province and the federal government is 50:50 for mineral oil and natural gas.

Despite the passing of the 18th Amendment, all revenue-generating ministries are still kept with the federal government and the rest are relocated to the provinces. One example is that of the ministry of power. The provinces are free to have their own power generation but the key factor relating to the decision for tariff and revenue collection still rests with the federal government. The mining sector should have devolved to the provinces too, but that is not the case. The labour ministry was relocated to the provinces whereas the revenue-generating EOBI still rests with the federal government. There are many other such examples. For the oil and gas sector, as per the 18thAmendment, the province has to be consulted before the federal government takes any decision, but this is not happening.

Although the 18th Amendment ensures fundamental rights, cohesive institutions are no more under the control of the Balochistan government, rendering it ineffective. Unfortunately, the situation in the country today fits the description of the state as described by Robert Jackson, former United States solicitor general: “A dysfunctional state is characterised by the growing ineffectiveness or paralysis of the administrative, legal, extractive and coercive institutions that form its essence. Some important features or syndromes … include: widespread corruption; the collapse of regular channels of communication and interaction between government and state officials, between state officials and society, and among state officials themselves; the fragmentation of society; and the loss of government control over the coercive institutions of the state.” Jackson further says that a state lacking “the characteristics of a common public realm: state offices possess uncertain authority, government organisations are ineffective and plagued by corruption, and the political community is highly segmented ethnically into several ‘publics’ rather than one” can become dysfunctional. He adds, “Corruption and incompetence infiltrate virtually every agency of government, not merely hampering but in most cases undermining state autonomy and capacity.”

The opportunity to foster balanced provincial autonomy seems to have been lost even after the passage of the 18th Amendment. Enhancement by the 18th Amendment is limiting the provinces’ jurisdiction to legislate and power to execute decisions. Therefore, in view of all this, it is difficult to accept that the 18th Amendment has provided provincial autonomy to the provinces in the real sense.

Published in The Express Tribune, January 13th, 2015.

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COMMENTS (2)

Asad Khan | 9 years ago | Reply

Want wonder those Federating Units have done to their own populace?. Granted there were short of instruments of monetary space and control but the result disclosed the intent.

It is fundamental duty of the Provinces to hold local bodies election but they failed miserably.

There is a situation 1940 and arrangement were according that environment. Present situation demand more service to their respective populace rather keep honking about Federation and Federating Units.

regards,

Naeem Khan | 9 years ago | Reply

The author has given the references of Articles 158 and 172-3, well and good. The problem is that Pakistanis in general has no respect for their constitution. In the past dictators has amended the constitution to fit their needs and to perpetuate their rule. Now we have some what democratic rule but the disrespect of the constitution remains the same. It is hilarious to see the amendments to the constitution are done in hours, ie the Military Courts. In democratic countries it takes months to make amendments but in Pakistan it just takes day or two. In the US, an amendment to the constitution has to be ratified by the 50 States and it take months not days or hours. Promises are made to the smaller provinces but never kept because it is in the interest of one larger province to keep the things as they are, otherwise they lose control to rule the country. East Pakistan was a prime example but would they ever learn any thing from fracturing the country. Perhaps 18the amendment was designed as an initial step toward provincial autonomy but don't expect the current government to honor it.

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