(InformPress.com) - There is no law and certainly no order in my country.
What happened this past week has shaken every Pakistani. Ms. Benazir Bhutto
was no ordinary person. She served as Prime Minister twice and had
returned to Pakistan in an effort to restore our country to the path of
democracy. With her assassination I have lost a friend and a partner in
democracy.
It is not too early to blame anybody for her death. One thing, however, is
beyond any doubt: The country is paying a very heavy price for the many
unpardonable actions of only one tyrant - Pervez Musharraf.
Musharraf alone is responsible for the chaos in Pakistan. Over the past
eight years he has assiduously worked at demolishing institutions,
subverting the Constitution, dismantling the judiciary and gagging the
media. Pakistan today is a tyrannical military-police state in which a
former Prime Minister can be gunned down in broad daylight. One of my own
political rallies was fired upon by PML-Q terrorists on Thursday, 27
December 2007, the day PPP Chairwoman Ms. Benazir Bhutto was killed in
Liaquat Bagh, Rawalpindi, near the Pakistan Army GHQ.
These are the darkest days in Pakistan's history and such are the wages of
dictatorship. There is widespread disillusionment. At all the election
rallies I have addressed, people have asked a simple question: Criminals are
punished for breaking laws, so why should those who subvert the Constitution
not be punished? Those who killed Ms. Benazir Bhutto are the evil
forces of darkness and authoritarianism. They are the ones who prefer rifles
to reason.
Ms. Bhutto's Pakistan People's Party (PPP) and my own Pakistan Muslim League
(PML-N) have traditionally been political rivals. We fought each other
through elections. We won some. We lost some. That is what democracy is all
about. Whoever has the majority rules. Ms. Bhutto and I both realized while
in exile that rivalry among democrats has made the task of manipulation
easier for undemocratic forces. We therefore decided not to allow such
nefarious games by the Establishment.
I fondly remember meeting with Ms. Benazir Bhutto in February 2005. She was
kind enough to visit me in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, where I lived after
Musharraf forced me into exile. We realized that we were fighting for the
same thing: Real Civil Democracy. She, too, believed in the rule of law and
rule of the people. A key point of the Charter
of Democracy that we signed in May 2006 was that everyone should
respect the mandate of the people and not allow the Establishment to play
dirty politics and subvert the will of the people. After the Jeddah meeting
we regularly consulted each other on issues of national and international
importance. On many occasions we tried to synchronize our strategies. We had
agreements and disagreements, but we both wanted to pull Pakistan back from
the brink of disaster.
While the PPP may have been our traditional rival, it is a national asset
whose leadership has inspired many Pakistanis. Political parties form part
of the basis on which the entire edifice of democracy rests. If our
country is to move forward, we need an independent judiciary, a sovereign
Parliament and strong political parties that are accountable to the people.
Without political parties, there will be hopelessness and
authoritarianism will thrive. Dictators fear the power of the people. That
is why they pit parties against each other and then try to destroy those
parties - to further their own agenda. This is what has happened in Pakistan
in recent years.
So, what is the way out of the depths to which Pakistan has been plunged?
First, Musharraf should go immediately. He is the primary and principal
source of discord. Second, an interim, broad-based, national unity
government should be immediately installed to heal the wounds of this
bruised nation. Third, the Constitution should be restored to what it was in
1973. The judiciary should be restored to its condition before 3
November 2007 - countering the boneheaded steps Musharraf took under the
garb of illegal "Emergency" rule. All curbs on the media-press should be
removed. Finally, free, fair and impartial elections should be held in a
friendly and peaceful environment under
> such a national government so that the people are able to choose their
representatives for a Parliament and government that can be trusted to
rebuild the country rather than serve the agenda of a dictator.
These are the only steps that will give the
country a semblance of stability. If Musharraf continues to illegally rule
as he has for the past eight years (1999-2008), then we are doing
nothing but waiting for another doomsday. The world must realize that
Musharraf's policies have neither limited nor curbed terrorism. In fact,
terrorism is stronger than ever, with far more sinister aspects, and as long
as Musharraf remains, there remains the threat of more terror. The people of
Pakistan should not be antagonized any further for the sake of only one
dictator. It is time for the international community to join hands in
support of true civilian democracy, human rights, civil liberties, freedom,
equal justice and the rule of just & fair laws in Pakistan. The answer to my
country's problems is a democratic process that promotes justice, peace,
harmony and tolerance, and hence can play an effective role in promoting
moderation. Under the ruling corrupt tyranny, there is no future for
economic development, family prosperity and business progress in Pakistan.
[Mr. Muhammad Nawaz Sharif, a former twice-elected Prime Minister of
Pakistan, is Chief of the Pakistan Muslim League (PML-N) based in
Lahore, Pakistan. PML-N Website:
http://www.pmln.org.pk ]