Dear Readers,
Pakistanis normally tend
to run down themselves and I suppose I am no exception. The
other day a friend of mine from among the ruling Abu Dhabi family
gently corrected me. Commenting on my complaint about pervasive
corruption at all levels in Pakistan, he said "Ikram, don't
criticize your people, they are not at fault. It is only when
the rulers are dishonest that the citizens down the line are
found to be crooked, they have to be to survive. On the other
hand, if the rulers are honest the citizens of the State will
also be generally honest because they have no real compulsion
to be crooked." I found this very revealing and very true,
coming from a person who I will not embarrass by revealing his
name but with whom it has been a privilege to be associated
with (those who know him will immediately guess his name). However
I beg to disagree with my friend, even if there is no compulsion
petty people having power tend to be crooked, they are in fact
compulsive crooks who have no need to be crooked. It is an irony
of fate that one of my Abu Dhabian friend's trusted employees
is a person with prayer beads in his hand and a prayer murmuring
from his lips, he is an out and out crook. This is just one
example of hypocrisy, rampant among those who are crooked to
the core of their despicable beings. In time this man would
have lined his pockets at the expense of my friend to be a power
in his own right. Who says the corrupt shall not inherit the
Earth? I am taking the liberty of reproducing my article, "Beware
the rage of devils".
By all accounts 2001 was Musharraf's best year
in power. Having been in the saddle for more than a year he
felt confident enough to launch an all-out offensive on a broad
front on a whole lot of issues be-devilling the existence of
Pakistan as a State. He moved against Islamic militancy well
before 9/11, and this despite the fact that some of his closest
military associates were soft on the "Taliban" issue,
one of them quite vehemently. 9/11 helped Musharraf in putting
a stop to the creeping Mullah-ism infecting the entire body
politic of the nation. The success of the Muttahida Majlis-i-Amal
(MMA) in the last elections in two provinces marks the highest
point in their campaign to Islam-ize Pakistan. There is no other
way for them now but downhill.
Musharraf does not react to criticism, on the
contrary he uses it objectively to build consensus on issues.
Before the Agra Summit in 2001 (labelled a failure, it was a
personal success for both Musharraf and Pakistan) Musharraf
consulted different groups, media, politicians, intellectuals,
technocrats, etc and even batches of bright young university
students to coalesce the mood among a cross-section of the populace.
The President is usually patient with even the most outlandish
of suggestions, seriously debating contentious issues and accepting
suggestions made clearly in the public and/or national interest.
Unfortunately in the Third World and countries where democracy
is either non-existent, or exists in a strait-jacket (like in
Pakistan), the un-electable hierarchy providing the leadership
is usually dismissive of anything not their own, being quite
cynical and contemptuous about putting down suggestions made
by anyone but themselves. Extremely mean and vicious in taking
suitable punitive action against recalcitrants at their own
whims and caprices, their absolute authority to ride roughshod
scares people from raising any protest about their plans and/or
instructions. That is why the un-electable usually plug the
Presidential system, how better to become PM than on Musharraf's
coattails?
Any common citizen of the State has a right
to give counsel to those in power on matters of public and/or
national interest, this advice has to be free of any motivation,
personal or professional. There are many ways of expressing
concern, it can be by direct communication or indirectly. The
media must account for, comment, suggest and recommend on issues
of importance to the masses to the government of the day. It
is upto the ruler/s to accept and act on the advice or reject
it. If the advice is not acted upon, the persons rendering the
advice must evaluate whether it is in the public and/or national
interest to agitate the matter further. If it is not that important,
it is advisable to keep quiet and let matters take their own
course. If some issue is of public and/or national interest,
then one must take up cudgels, for the media it is obligatory.
One must try to soft-pedal and/or use alternate not-so-public
channels, if still the message doesn't get through then there
is no option but to choose a more public route. This can be
done in a decent, forthright manner or one can abandon civility
and be blunt and offensive. Ready access means face-to-face
eye contact in getting one's message across, others have to
negotiate their way through very rigid bureaucratic layers of
authority. Mature leaders do not "shoot the messenger"
bringing bad news. If the person in power is a friend and does
not take the advice rendered even then he (or she) will invariably
take time out to debate the issue with the friend to explain
the reasoning for not following the advice. Reasoning takes
time and many others will invariably have the same grouse. Because
of time constraints on the leader, duplication has to be avoided
and the modus operandi for satisfying any objective criticism
modulated in relation to the event and the consequences thereof.
Armymen (like all autocrats) are usually less
charitable than politicians and bureaucrats to anyone criticizing
them. Far different from the norm, not only did Musharraf's
military regime allow absolute press freedom, he broke the monopoly
of the public sector on the electronic media. Criticism has
sometimes perilously bordered on a fail-safe line between objective
criticism and scurrilous personal attacks, even in the most
trying circumstances he has kept cool. He has had good counsel
from his close aides, among them late Lt Gen (Retd) Ghulam Ahmad,
his Principal Staff Officer as Chief Executive and Maj Gen Rashid
Qureshi, the former DG ISPR. The aura of power creates new dynamics,
and sometimes a very thin skin. To his credit Musharraf has
not succumbed to this perennial leader's disease, one cannot
say the same for some of his associates who deserve all the
reprobation targeted at them. Personal vendetta compromises
objective criticism, on the other hand the "knee-jerk reaction"
by anyone being censured is to say they are being attacked out
of personal motivation. Their reaction is obnoxious, these flunkies
act "more loyal than the king".
Behaviour and toleration is a matter of breeding,
Musharraf has had the best, both at home and later on in the
unit formations he served within the Army. Thus is formed the
basic character trait of most army officers, overwhelmingly
officers and gentlemen. Before reporting to my father's unit
on being commissioned, the Second-in-Command (21C) of the Battalion
rang up my father, who had retired by then, and asked him, "Do
you want your son to be an officer or a gentleman?" My
late father replied, "preferably both". Not only these
qualities missing among some in the upper hierarchy today, corruption
is being openly condoned to the detriment of the nation. The
tragedy is that those trying for accountability are held accountable
by tin-pot leaders of no consequence. This nation has already
paid an immeasurable high price for having had to tolerate those
who have looted the nation at their will and those who have
protected the looters.
Businessmen writing columns are an "endangered
species", they are almost extinct. As maybe the only one
in the entire world having a regular weekly newspaper column
for the past 17-18 years in a number of English and Urdu newspapers
within the country and outside, one gets constant "advice"
from those who find my articles "critical". Their
"observation" is that writing would "damage my
business interests", "why do you want to be different?"
The implied threat is not to be taken lightly as I have discovered
to my detriment from regime to regime over the years. My company
has suffered occasionally because of my "indiscretions".
The routine is the same, first the carrot, and then the stick.
This has never emanated from the top hierarchy in any one of
the cases. Some "flunky" down the line has usually
sanctioned the "retribution". While both Ms Benazir
and Mian Nawaz Sharif had reason to be upset with me from time
to time, they forget that objective criticism also got them
profuse praise on many an occasion, they have never themselves
initiated anything vengeful, "who will rid me of this mad
priest?" Those who attempt to shut people like me up do
so for their own sake and on their own account but they calculate
coldly that their leader/s would not be averse to seeing their
tormentor "in the rye", that anything they manage
to frame "legally" would be acceptable to the rulers.
Whenever the objective is illegal, the process of targeting
that objective is also illegal. One normally bewares the rage
of angels, in Pakistan we must beware the rage of devils.
M. Ikram Sehgal