One of the potential paradoxes of the elections taking place in Pakistan today is that regardless of who is the winner the Army’s image and reputation seems to be a clear loser. Judiciary is not independent. Consequently, many can no longer find or see it. all very subtle and carefully orchestrated”. “Do you want to see our hospitality?” one official said, according to London’s Sunday Times, as he took his gun out of his pocket. He says its “unwritten, unstated . It stretches back to independence. They’ve been assigned magistrate powers to hold on-the-spot trials of anyone accused of breaking the laws and, thereafter, to sentence them.
Munizae Jahangir, an Aaj TV anchor who travelled with Mr Sharif on his return from London, was threatened by security and intelligence operatives when she filmed the former PM being taken off the plane.“Self-censorship is the new norm”, according to Raza Rumi, editor of the Daily Times. For the first time after 31 years of reporting on Pakistan, Sunday Times’ chief foreign correspondent Christina Lamb was denied a visa.”The story of the Pakistani military’s interference in the nation’s politics is not new. However, the recent episode arguably began with the dismissal of Nawaz Sharif as Prime Minister followed by his debarment from politics and leading to his arrest and imprisonment.”
The Human Rights Commission chairman, Mehdi Hasan, calls this “blatant, aggressive and unabashed attempts to manipulate the outcome of the upcoming elections”. As scholar Ahmed Rashid puts it: “For the first time, not just the elite, but the public is aware of the Army’s major role. He also claims the National Accountability Court, which is trying corruption cases, is required to report to the ISI every evening. Alongside the Pakistan People’s Party and Awami Party candidates, they have been harassed, their movements monitored and restricted and their electoral banners removed.
Ironically, they were given permission to stand just after Pakistan was placed on the watchlist of the Financial Action Task Force..” Clearly discernible behind this is the iron hand of the military.After the election was called, Pakistan’s Human Rights Commission reported that the military’s security agencies put pressure on Nawaz Sharif’s candidates to switch loyalties and Australia plugs return their tickets.” The group’s well-known news channel was shifted by Islamabad’s main cable network from the number 9 to number 28 slot. Even the media is getting directions from the military.In the circumstances it’s hard to resist the conclusion of outspoken former senator Farhatullah Babar: “A creeping coup has taken place against the authority of the civilian government.
Its intimidation of politicians and journalists and its enormous power to manipulate the electoral outcome has been recognised and adversely noted across the country..Haroon, who is also president of the All Pakistan Newspapers Society, accused the Pakistani military in a BBC Hard Talk interview of an “unprecedented assault” on press freedom.Side by side with this sorry story is the disturbing saga of what has progressively happened to those parts of the Pakistani media that have the courage to speak out and criticise. “Today the judiciary and the media have come in the control of the ‘bandookwala’.Today, as people cast their votes, some 371,000 troops will be deployed both outside and inside polling stations. In addition to losing viewership, it’s losing advertising revenue. Some 200 Lashkar-e-Tayyaba candidates are in the field. The Human Rights Commission says they’ve been “subject to censorship, intimidation, harassment and abduction”. The BBC says nearly 17,000 of his party members face criminal cases for breaking unspecified election rules. Leading columnists have had their columns dropped; TV stations have introduced a 90-second delay to beep out anything sensitive. It is different from the martial law of the past, with two resulting outcomes — the civilian government exists, but has no authority; press freedom exists, but journalists have no freedom. Its velvet glove has worn very thin. As Ahmed Rashid said: “The real power appears to rest with Pakistan’s military and the judiciary, which China Power Cords sees undiluted democracy as a threat
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