General Musharraf's House of
Cards Starts to Crumble: Major Changes Imminent
South Asia Tribune -
Issue No 56,
August 24-30, 2003 -
By Maryam Hussain
ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Jamali and General Musharraf have practically said
their goodbyes at a meeting last week and Islamabad is now abuzz with reports
that a major change was imminent, within days, with Aftab Khan Sherpao and
Shaukat Aziz running as favorites.
Jamali
finally broke his silence before the all powerful President, when his government
was accused of failure to govern and run the Parliament smoothly. But it
unfortunately was his last gasp for oxygen before he drowns midstream under his
own weight.
As Jamali
left for a 4-day visit to Saudi Arabia, the only country he was allowed to
travel by Musharraf during his tenure, key members of his personal staff started
to move out of the PM Secretariat, sensing that the ship was sinking. Brigadier
Mansoor, Jamali's special Assistant sought a 4-month leave while two of his
personal staff have also gone.
The
crucial meeting called by General Musharraf and his 40 MNAs, laid down the
contours of the next political act in which Musharraf and Jamali cannot co-exist
as both have blamed each other for the failure of the system. But analysts say
when Jamali goes down, he will take a big chunk of Musharraf’s political capital
with him.
The PM’s
troubles got worse when Jamali’s coalition party managers disowned him before
the President with Chaudhry Wajahat saying they were looking up to the President
for guidance and no one else. The message was clear. Let Mr. Jamali say his
prayers in the Holy Land and then he fades out.
Shaukat
Aziz and Aftab Ahmed Khan Sherpao are being tipped as the likely replacement for
the toothless and clueless chief executive from Balochistan. Because Shaukat
Aziz is not member of the National Assembly, NWFP’s Aftab Sherpao is emerging as
the new prime ministerial horse.
A very
senior minister in the Jamali cabinet confirmed to the South Asia Tribune that
Jamali would not be able to reshuffle his cabinet and would be replaced before
that. The minister simply laughed when asked about the change and said: “Do you
really think that Jamali would survive for the reshuffle.”
Asked to
explain his shocking disclosure, he said Jamali had lost his utility in the eyes
of powers that be. “Jamali has lost everything. He does not enjoy support in PML-Q
nor is now acceptable to the President.”
Jamali
is partly responsible for his plight. He lacked the political wisdom and cunning
to maneuver his way in a maze. He failed to cash on the breakup of MMA with ARD
over the LFO. But he is only partly to be blamed.
He was
trying hard to swallow the insults which Musharraf and the Gujrat Choudhries
were heaping on him for the last many months. He had been asked to win over the
Opposition when practically he had no powers and no room to make any deal.
Musharraf was as firm and inflexible as day one. So Jamali cannot be blamed for
the breakdown. Yet he took it for so long.
Last week
he decided enough was enough. Jamali lost his temper at the meeting of Musharraf
and his 40 MNAs and said all those things he wanted to say. Many MNAs also
opened up confronting Musharraf for the first time.
The punch
line came when Jamali blamed Musharraf for running away from the Joint Session
of Parliament which he said had “doomed” the Parliament.
“What are
you talking about”, a shocked Musharraf quipped. But his looks made it clear
that he was through with this prime minister. After the exchange, Musharraf did
not bother to have the cup of tea with the PM over which he had invited all
these “guests”. Reports said Jamali was seen taking his tea alone in a corner,
by himself.
Jamali
was under the impression that it was a smart move to pressure Musharraf on
running away from Parliament. He reminded the President that he was not
following his constitutional obligations. In other words Musharraf had violated
the constitution.
The move
would have worked if President had decided to address the parliament. He would
then be depending totally on the support and sympathies of ruling party. But
Musharraf did not buy it as he knew that Jamali could not deliver.
The Prime
Minister also annoyed his coalition partners. The shocking outburst came when he
told the President that his ministers were not able to handle even their
secretaries who were not ready to accept their orders. Jamali ridiculed the
ministers picked up by Musharraf.
This was
in reply to Musharraf’s criticism on the performance of Jamali during the last
ten months. Jamali’s defence was clear that he was trying to stand up against
the Opposition while Musharraf’s hand picked ministers were not even able to
confront their secretaries.
Before
this hard talk in the Presidency, Jamali had told the President how he was
insulted by his own ministers in the federal cabinet. He had specifically named
Faisal Saleh Hayat who always behaved rudely used to pass sarcastic remarks
during cabinet meetings in front of all the ministers.
Another
minister who insulted Jamali was Yar Mohammad Rind of Farooq Leghari’s party.
This sardar from Balochistan never stood up to show respect for Jamali in
cabinet meetings. His logic was simple.
Rind says
Jamali is not a Sardars or chieftain. He belongs to a lesser cast of Balochs and
he would not show respect to a man who is less important and less respectful in
his home province. The Rind tribe is more powerful and respected in Balochistan.
Jamali
also tried to convey to the President that he was helpless in running the
government in the presence of ministers who were imposed by the Presidency.
Reports about corruption of sitting ministers including Awais Leghari, Liaqat
Jatoi, Abdul Sattar Lalika, Nourez Shakoor and Faisal Saleh Hayat were also
worrying the PM.
Former
federal minister Khalid Ranjha, who is still hopeful of getting the slot of the
Law Minister, was also unhappy with Musharraf’s decision to promulgate yet
another ordinance with regard to contempt of court.
The
ordinance envisaging more punishments and powers for the judiciary was brought
to deter the defiant Opposition parties which had started to challenge the
powers of the Supreme Court of Pakistan to authorize President Musharraf to
amend the constitution.
Ranjha
was of the view that when the parliament was functioning it might have been
better for President to make such laws by getting them passed from the
parliament. He told the President that this might have not gone well in the
constitutional and legal circles of the country and might have given wrong
message to the people that parliament was a rubber stamp.
People’s
Party Patriot Dr Sher Afgan questioned the President about his remarks calling
the entire parliament as ‘uncivilized’ and raised the issue as to why Musharraf
hesitated in addressing the Parliament.
Dr Afgan
told the President that he should have not said all this about the parliament
which was a sovereign and supreme body.
However,
Senator Gulzar from NWFP, known for spending millions to buy his parliamentary
seats, made a shocking offer to both President and Prime Minister. He told them
that if they needed more MNAs to strengthen their position, he was ready to
present a dozen of MNAs after buying their loyalties.
No one
liked his offer at in a forum in which important political issues were being
discussed.
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