Dec 28, 2007
Opinion: Pakistan after Bhutto
My opinion piece, issued by Project Syndicate, has been picked up by a number of publications, including Pakistan’s Daily Times, Lebanon’s Daily Star, Miami Herald, the Scotsman, the San Diego Union-Tribune, and The Guardian’s Comment is Free.
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Pakistan after Bhutto
By Arif Rafiq
With the assassination of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, Pakistan’s state of turmoil has reached a new crescendo. As head of the nation’s most popular political party, Bhutto largely transcended Pakistan’s ethnic and sectarian divides. Her return from exile in October was seen as a step toward curbing the country’s dangerous fragmentation; her murder shatters those hopes. President Pervez Musharraf must take immediate steps – most importantly, the formation of a national unity government – to prevent Pakistan from tearing apart at the seams.
In deciding that her People’s Party would participate in the January parliamentary election, Bhutto threw a lifeline to Musharraf, who has been beset by multiple insurgencies, a nationwide terrorist threat, and rock-bottom legitimacy. Both Musharraf and his supporters in Washington hoped that mainstream parties’ participation in the election would end Pakistan’s governance crisis and provide popular support for a decisive confrontation with the Taliban and al-Qaeda.
Now, however, the election will likely be postponed. Indeed, Musharraf might be compelled to impose emergency rule again, as he did in November, should Pakistan’s stability further deteriorate. There are reports of violence in cities across Pakistan. Karachi, a multi-ethnic metropolis, could erupt into full-scale chaos. During the 1990’s, violence there between Bhutto’s party and a local ethnic party – now allied with Musharraf – took thousands of lives.
In these circumstances, a state of emergency could be warranted. But, given Musharraf’s lack of legitimacy, such a move would further infuriate Bhutto’s supporters, whose street power Bhutto had contained since October. This could set the stage for a violent confrontation between the Pakistani masses and Musharraf’s regime.
The nightmare scenario envisioned by many in Pakistan – a nuclear-armed country actively targeted by al-Qaeda and the Taliban – could become a reality. But this need not be a foregone conclusion.
Musharraf, who regularly claims to act on the basis of a “Pakistan first” policy, must now let go of partisan objectives and form a national unity government led by a prime minister from the opposition. Any subsequent measures, including temporary imposition of emergency rule and full-scale war against the terrorists, require the complete support of the opposition parties. Musharraf and his political allies cannot be seen as benefiting from Bhutto’s assassination; nor can they afford the perception of a cover-up. His opponents must be incorporated into the decision-making process.
A national unity government must assume three major responsibilities. First, it must establish an independent commission to determine who was responsible for Bhutto’s murder. While political assassination is not unfamiliar – Pakistan’s first prime minister was killed in the same park where Bhutto was murdered – it is imperative that the culprits be apprehended and tried. Anything short of this would permanently taint Pakistan’s leadership and impede all attempts at political reconciliation.
Second, it must take necessary measures to ensure public safety and political stability, while paving the way for free and fair elections. It must offer Pakistan a consensual path toward winning back its tribal areas from the insurgents, end the wave of terror in its cities, and ensure the election of a new, legitimate government.
Finally, it must begin a dialogue with Musharraf and the military on a permanent, constitutional separation of powers. If Bhutto had not been assassinated and, instead, successfully became prime minister, she would likely have clashed with Musharraf over his arbitrary empowerment of the presidency at the expense of the premiership. The issue will not go away with Bhutto’s death.
Pakistan’s civil and military elite must create a broad consensus – perhaps with foreign assistance, but never with foreign meddling – on the constitutional roles of the prime minister, president, and the military. Ravaged by endemic elite discord since its founding, Pakistan desperately needs an elite reconciliation that includes all of the country’s major stakeholders. Otherwise, Pakistan’s terrorists, who feed off of political instability, will continue to gain, while the country’s poor and illiterate majority will continue to lose ground.
The murder of Benazir Bhutto need not result in the country’s demise. Pakistan’s elite have an opportunity to overcome their differences, unite in opposition to militants, and transform their failing state into a stable and prosperous democracy.
If they succeed in bringing about a national renewal, Bhutto, a monumental political figure in Pakistani history, will not have died in vain.
Arif Rafiq, a policy and communications consultant, edits the Pakistan Policy Blog (www.pakistanpolicy.com).
Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2007.
www.project-syndicate.org








[...] the best opinion on the issue I’ve read so far is Arif Rafiq of the Pakistan Policy Blog’s compelling analysis of Pakistan’s political situation in the aftermath of the [...]
Dear Shri Arif,
The thing you are suggesting is an ARRANGEMENT of PAKISTANI ELITE by Musharaff or his opponents.Ofcourse you say it could be done with US or outside help.Again you think the masses of pakistan are fools because they are uneducated and POOR.
You are dead wrong here Sir.
Give people of Pakistan one vote in a FREE AND FAIR MANNER. You will have a pakistan which is great for future of the entire subcontinent. The socalled elite control money because they own lands which Britsh conferred(in the region of10,000 acres in some cases.)Zamindari was abolished in India and this paved way for democracy however flawed it may be.Modi is fundementalist but he represents the majority in Gujerat.mayawathis is backward but she represents UP and Dalits. sAme with other elected representatives who are ILLETEREATE.
poor HAVE ALWAYS SHOWN WISDOM NOT KNOWN TO THE elite
Dear Captainjohann,
I certainly don’t think the masses of Pakistan are fools.
Free and fair elections are an important step toward a vibrant, democratic and secure Pakistan.
But who speaks for the impoverished majority?
Ultimately, their interests and preferences have to be channeled within a political process and exercised by chosen representatives.
As you indicate, the elite on the whole does not represent their best interests. Political and economic power in Pakistan is concentrated in the hands of a select few: feudal leaders, a civilian bureaucracy, military and intelligence figures, the business elite, etc.
The feudal system is a major roadblock toward the empowerment of the Pakistani masses.
But — aside from some sort of revolutionary movement in which the major parties and power brokers are thrown out and a new leadership comes to power representing the majority of Pakistanis who earn less than $2 a day, have incomplete access to primary, vital services — how do you suggest change to come about?
Please provide a concrete methodology.
The lesson from Pakistan’s history is despite the fact that its elite as a whole have failed the people, their hold on power is long lasting.
In the end, they must be constrained legally and held to account via civil society, the media, and regular elections.
Things are changing. But in the interim, the current actors are not going away. The must come together on the rules of the game. Personalities must be subordinate to laws.
It seems the world needs to address this issue of inequality of wealth – redistributing to the poor – this is the aim of UOCA.
But I think Kashmir was interconnected to this whole mess, and it is only when this is addressed that not just Pakistan, but India and perhaps the entire war on terrorism will come to a much more just and peaceful conclusion.
Please see http://kashmuj.blogspot.com/
Sir Arif Rafiq,
Your insightful article was also picked up by the Philippine Daily Inquirer, our country’s number one national broadsheet. Happy New Year!
Congrats on being picked up so many places!