What's new

A judicial coup

Norwegian

BANNED
Joined
Aug 19, 2014
Messages
19,001
Reaction score
11
Country
Israel
Location
Norway
A judicial coup
Nawaz Sharif’s conviction confirms that a politician can’t be corrupt and anti-military at the same time in Pakistan
Written by Husain Haqqani | Updated: July 9, 2018 12:41:28 am
nawaz-sharif-759.jpg


Nawaz Sharif was disqualified a few months ago by the Supreme Court for not fulfilling the constitutional criteria for honesty and sagacity. (Source: Reuters/File)
For the first 23 years after independence in 1947, Pakistanis were denied the right to vote. Since 1970, they have been allowed to vote intermittently but they are still denied the right to vote freely. The upcoming July 25 election in Pakistan has been marred by a series of attacks, some by the judiciary and others by the country’s ubiquitous military-intelligence machinery, aimed at politically decapitating former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and his Pakistan Muslim League (PML-N).

Sharif was disqualified a few months ago by the Supreme Court for not fulfilling the constitutional criteria for honesty and sagacity. Few, if any, prominent Pakistani politicians fulfill that vague requirement. It was inserted into the constitution by Sharif’s original mentor, General Zia ul Haq, precisely because its vagueness enabled unelected branches of government to choose who could or could not run for elected office.


Ironically, Sharif refused to support other political parties in deleting the articles of the constitution that were used to disqualify him just a few years ago. His trial, and conviction last week for possessing assets beyond his means, seems like poetic justice to those who hate the fact that he started his career as a military protege, amassed considerable wealth while in office, and went on to build an independent political base in the Punjab province with the help of that wealth. But those who can rise above their pique at Sharif or other individual politicians realise that no politician in Pakistan is ever punished for corruption and Sharif is no exception. Sharif’s career affirms the unwritten law of Pakistani politics: A politician can be corrupt or he/she can oppose the military-led Pakistani establishment but he cannot be corrupt and anti-military at the same time.


In the 1990s, when Sharif and the PML-N were backed by the military, the institutions of state (including the judiciary) found nothing wrong with their acquisition of wealth. The focus then was on the alleged corruption of Benazir Bhutto’s husband Asif Zardari. Sharif supported selective accountability against Bhutto and Zardari and the latter spent 11 years in prison without being convicted.

But General Musharraf’s 1999 coup transformed Sharif. He was now anti-establishment and critical of the military and that is what seems to have cooked his goose. Since his return from exile after Musharraf’s downfall, Sharif made no effort to partner with the Pakistan Peoples Party of Bhutto and Zardari to undo the legal regime that allows the judiciary to intervene in political matters.

Sharif himself took petitions to the Supreme Court against the Zardari government, including the so-called Memogate case that affected me personally. I was accused of writing a memo inviting US support against an impending coup. There was no coup in the works at the time and I wrote no memo of the sort that was alleged. But I was supposed to rebut the story woven by a Pakistani-origin businessman living in Monaco to “clear” my name. This inverted the normal system of criminal law, which requires prosecutors to prove guilt beyond doubt at trial. Instead of being the court of final appeal, the Supreme Court acted as the court of first instance.

Sharif himself became a victim of this perverted system of justice when, after the appearance of his name in the Panama Papers, the Court insisted that he prove the provenance of his properties in London. The former PM was disqualified before he was tried. Even at trial, the judge concluded that the ownership of the London properties in question could not be ascertained. He still went on to convict Sharif for failing to prove where he got the money to buy these properties. One need not be convinced of Sharif’s innocence to observe that he was a victim of less than transparent legal proceedings. His downfall started when the military got upset with an article in Dawn suggesting that the civilian government wanted to act against the jihadis but the military did not.

Corruption is a painful reality of Pakistani politics but so is the fact that it is Pakistan’s military that decides who remains in politics and who is ousted through court judgments. After 60 years of direct and indirect meddling in politics, the military has not been able to create its ideal polity and Pakistan remains unstable and mired in corruption.

For the last three years, Sharif has been the target of a relentless propaganda war and the shenanigans of Pakistan’s invisible government. Just as Sharif was the beneficiary of similar manoeuvres against Bhutto in the 1988 and 1990 elections, cricketer-turned-politician Imran Khan is the intended beneficiary of the campaign against Sharif. Apart from judicial rulings, Khan is being aided through coerced changes in loyalty of locally influential politicians and pressure on the media to black out anything that disfavours the preferred candidate in the coming election.

A civilian leader must deliver a measure of prosperity and economic development to maintain political support. Contrary to the military’s narrative, the major reason for Pakistan’s economic difficulties is not just corruption; it is lack of investment and expansion of productivity resulting from the country being seen as a jihadi safe haven.

Even in this election, several groups of jihadis and assorted extremists have been allowed to participate. One of them — Khadim Husain Rizvi of Tehrik Labbaik Ya Rasool Allah — told an election rally recently that he would nuke the Netherlands if someone there ever published a cartoon of Prophet Muhammad. Tolerance for and mainstreaming of such dangerous individuals is unlikely to bolster Pakistan’s image or economic prospects.

Civil-military tension is built in into Pakistan’s current structure of state. If civilians defer to the military leadership without any questions, they lose popular support and have to face all the blame that comes with supporting the military’s monochromatic policies. If, however, they dare to disagree like Nawaz Sharif did, they would lose the institution’s backing just as Sharif lost it over the years. Then we would see them becoming targets of similar viciousness and possibly adverse judicial verdicts.

Unfortunately, the election on July 25 will not rid Pakistan of that tension.

The writer is director for South and Central Asia at the Hudson Institute in Washington D.C. and was Pakistan’s ambassador to the US between 2008-11. His latest book is Reimagining Pakistan
 
. . .
@Solomon2 @inder and other Indians who are Butt hurt after losing their ally Nawaz Sharif can cry and mourn here
you can have your screwed opinions/views it makes no difference whatsoever.

But you need to give it to nawaz sharif, he returned back to pakistan even after knowing that he will be jailed. Corrupt or no corrupt he is a man with balls.

Can you say the same about your brave commando who is still hiding in a bush in some desert in middle east. This guy for all his big mouth still dare not return back even when establishment is running the show.

you need to think in a unbiased manner with facts on table not with air fairy emotions. If there was a tax on conspiracy theories in pakistan it would become the richest country in the world.
 
.
But you need to give it to nawaz sharif, he returned back to pakistan even after knowing that he will be jailed.
Moron. The only reason he returned was to file an appeal against the verdict and possibly get bail if possible. He didn't return to save the nation by going to jail

This guy for all his big mouth still dare not return back even when establishment is running the show.
Commando was allowed to leave after Nawaz government made a deal with him just like Musharraf made a deal with Nawaz Sharif and let him leave for Jeddah

you need to think in a unbiased manner with facts on table not with air fairy emotions
The article above is not unbiased. Its anti establishment
 
.
Moron. The only reason he returned was to file an appeal against the verdict and possibly get bail if possible. He didn't return to save the nation by going to jail


Commando was allowed to leave after Nawaz government made a deal with him just like Musharraf made a deal with Nawaz Sharif and let him leave for Jeddah


The article above is not unbiased. Its anti establishment
look you are opinionated thats why you are blind to facts, its not what reason he came or whether he is corrupt or not...etc thats a different discussion.

question is did he come back knowing he will be jailed? yes he did.


For rest of your usual views why dont you apply common sense, wouldnt nawaz know that it is pretty much certain he wont get bail from a court which is backed by the establishment?

You are so biased that you refuse to accept the fact that it is the same court/institution which has called for arrest of musharaff who is absconding is good but nawaz who returns back to face the court is bad.
 
.
Moron. The only reason he returned was to file an appeal against the verdict and possibly get bail if possible. He didn't return to save the nation by going to jail


Commando was allowed to leave after Nawaz government made a deal with him just like Musharraf made a deal with Nawaz Sharif and let him leave for Jeddah


The article above is not unbiased. Its anti establishment
He returned to save his wealth and avoid 10 million pound penalty, plus estate confiscation in UK and Pak.
 
Last edited:
.
you can have your screwed opinions/views it makes no difference whatsoever.

But you need to give it to nawaz sharif, he returned back to pakistan even after knowing that he will be jailed. Corrupt or no corrupt he is a man with balls.

Can you say the same about your brave commando who is still hiding in a bush in some desert in middle east. This guy for all his big mouth still dare not return back even when establishment is running the show.

you need to think in a unbiased manner with facts on table not with air fairy emotions. If there was a tax on conspiracy theories in pakistan it would become the richest country in the world.
Hehadno option it was either help his party and brother or stay putside and have all of his Pakistani property confiscated and his party shattered
 
.
Hehadno option it was either help his party and brother or stay putside and have all of his Pakistani property confiscated and his party shattered
If you say he is corrupt and has looted money , he can live outside pakistan without any problem as money should not be an issue for him. Isnt musharraf living outside pakistan after absconding from the courts?

As I said said good or bad he may be, he certainly has the gumption to return back and face the music unlike much vaunted musharraf.

He returned to save his wealth and avoid 10 million pound penalty, plus estate confiscation in UK and Pak.
properties in pakistan can be confisticated but those outside pakistan is pretty hard. The amount of litigation and proof is way too high. We already have a case of Indian who took loan , enjoyed it and is holed up in UK. In spite of all the evidence it is taking a ton of time to attach the properties he has owned there. So dont jump to half conclusions.
 
.
If you say he is corrupt and has looted money , he can live outside pakistan without any problem as money should not be an issue for him. Isnt musharraf living outside pakistan after absconding from the courts?

As I said said good or bad he may be, he certainly has the gumption to return back and face the music unlike much vaunted musharraf.


properties in pakistan can be confisticated but those outside pakistan is pretty hard. The amount of litigation and proof is way too high. We already have a case of Indian who took loan , enjoyed it and is holed up in UK. In spite of all the evidence it is taking a ton of time to attach the properties he has owned there. So dont jump to half conclusions.
If Pakistan fail to get those properties then second and solid option is UK . Usually they sell those properties
 
.
If Pakistan fail to get those properties then second and solid option is UK . Usually they sell those properties
please tell me how can pakistan sell properties in UK on which they have no control over.
Unless properties are bought using drug money,money raised by terrorists..etc chances of UK seizing those properties is very slim. (Most of the times they turn a blind eye if they are not affected, bcos they can use it as leverage over the other country.)

Even if you loot a bank in pakistan and buy a property in UK, it is still a legal transaction as no crime has been committed in UK. UK will simply play the 3 monkeys joke unless they are going to gain something.
 
.
please tell me how can pakistan sell properties in UK on which they have no control over.
Unless properties are bought using drug money,money raised by terrorists..etc chances of UK seizing those properties is very slim. (Most of the times they turn a blind eye if they are not affected, bcos they can use it as leverage over the other country.)

Even if you loot a bank in pakistan and buy a property in UK, it is still a legal transaction as no crime has been committed in UK. UK will simply play the 3 monkeys joke unless they are going to gain something.
Indian govt file a case and won, and its good example of recovering the dirty money properties proceeding recovered by the native land. I will dig in and post. I think it was money laundering case , same like Nawaz.
 
.
If you say he is corrupt and has looted money , he can live outside pakistan without any problem as money should not be an issue for him. Isnt musharraf living outside pakistan after absconding from the courts?

As I said said good or bad he may be, he certainly has the gumption to return back and face the music unlike much vaunted musharraf.


properties in pakistan can be confisticated but those outside pakistan is pretty hard. The amount of litigation and proof is way too high. We already have a case of Indian who took loan , enjoyed it and is holed up in UK. In spite of all the evidence it is taking a ton of time to attach the properties he has owned there. So dont jump to half conclusions.
He is not a British national if he didnt return he wouldve been recalled through interpol plus his Pakistani propertues wouldve been cinfiscated and auctioned on court orders
He was stuck between a rock and a hard place also he was fooled by turncoats about reception media and public would give him on his return but hats off to Askari sahab and Dr Shahid Masood they ruined his plan
 
.
A judicial coup
Nawaz Sharif’s conviction confirms that a politician can’t be corrupt and anti-military at the same time in Pakistan
Written by Husain Haqqani | Updated: July 9, 2018 12:41:28 am
nawaz-sharif-759.jpg


Nawaz Sharif was disqualified a few months ago by the Supreme Court for not fulfilling the constitutional criteria for honesty and sagacity. (Source: Reuters/File)
For the first 23 years after independence in 1947, Pakistanis were denied the right to vote. Since 1970, they have been allowed to vote intermittently but they are still denied the right to vote freely. The upcoming July 25 election in Pakistan has been marred by a series of attacks, some by the judiciary and others by the country’s ubiquitous military-intelligence machinery, aimed at politically decapitating former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and his Pakistan Muslim League (PML-N).

Sharif was disqualified a few months ago by the Supreme Court for not fulfilling the constitutional criteria for honesty and sagacity. Few, if any, prominent Pakistani politicians fulfill that vague requirement. It was inserted into the constitution by Sharif’s original mentor, General Zia ul Haq, precisely because its vagueness enabled unelected branches of government to choose who could or could not run for elected office.


Ironically, Sharif refused to support other political parties in deleting the articles of the constitution that were used to disqualify him just a few years ago. His trial, and conviction last week for possessing assets beyond his means, seems like poetic justice to those who hate the fact that he started his career as a military protege, amassed considerable wealth while in office, and went on to build an independent political base in the Punjab province with the help of that wealth. But those who can rise above their pique at Sharif or other individual politicians realise that no politician in Pakistan is ever punished for corruption and Sharif is no exception. Sharif’s career affirms the unwritten law of Pakistani politics: A politician can be corrupt or he/she can oppose the military-led Pakistani establishment but he cannot be corrupt and anti-military at the same time.


In the 1990s, when Sharif and the PML-N were backed by the military, the institutions of state (including the judiciary) found nothing wrong with their acquisition of wealth. The focus then was on the alleged corruption of Benazir Bhutto’s husband Asif Zardari. Sharif supported selective accountability against Bhutto and Zardari and the latter spent 11 years in prison without being convicted.

But General Musharraf’s 1999 coup transformed Sharif. He was now anti-establishment and critical of the military and that is what seems to have cooked his goose. Since his return from exile after Musharraf’s downfall, Sharif made no effort to partner with the Pakistan Peoples Party of Bhutto and Zardari to undo the legal regime that allows the judiciary to intervene in political matters.

Sharif himself took petitions to the Supreme Court against the Zardari government, including the so-called Memogate case that affected me personally. I was accused of writing a memo inviting US support against an impending coup. There was no coup in the works at the time and I wrote no memo of the sort that was alleged. But I was supposed to rebut the story woven by a Pakistani-origin businessman living in Monaco to “clear” my name. This inverted the normal system of criminal law, which requires prosecutors to prove guilt beyond doubt at trial. Instead of being the court of final appeal, the Supreme Court acted as the court of first instance.

Sharif himself became a victim of this perverted system of justice when, after the appearance of his name in the Panama Papers, the Court insisted that he prove the provenance of his properties in London. The former PM was disqualified before he was tried. Even at trial, the judge concluded that the ownership of the London properties in question could not be ascertained. He still went on to convict Sharif for failing to prove where he got the money to buy these properties. One need not be convinced of Sharif’s innocence to observe that he was a victim of less than transparent legal proceedings. His downfall started when the military got upset with an article in Dawn suggesting that the civilian government wanted to act against the jihadis but the military did not.

Corruption is a painful reality of Pakistani politics but so is the fact that it is Pakistan’s military that decides who remains in politics and who is ousted through court judgments. After 60 years of direct and indirect meddling in politics, the military has not been able to create its ideal polity and Pakistan remains unstable and mired in corruption.

For the last three years, Sharif has been the target of a relentless propaganda war and the shenanigans of Pakistan’s invisible government. Just as Sharif was the beneficiary of similar manoeuvres against Bhutto in the 1988 and 1990 elections, cricketer-turned-politician Imran Khan is the intended beneficiary of the campaign against Sharif. Apart from judicial rulings, Khan is being aided through coerced changes in loyalty of locally influential politicians and pressure on the media to black out anything that disfavours the preferred candidate in the coming election.

A civilian leader must deliver a measure of prosperity and economic development to maintain political support. Contrary to the military’s narrative, the major reason for Pakistan’s economic difficulties is not just corruption; it is lack of investment and expansion of productivity resulting from the country being seen as a jihadi safe haven.

Even in this election, several groups of jihadis and assorted extremists have been allowed to participate. One of them — Khadim Husain Rizvi of Tehrik Labbaik Ya Rasool Allah — told an election rally recently that he would nuke the Netherlands if someone there ever published a cartoon of Prophet Muhammad. Tolerance for and mainstreaming of such dangerous individuals is unlikely to bolster Pakistan’s image or economic prospects.

Civil-military tension is built in into Pakistan’s current structure of state. If civilians defer to the military leadership without any questions, they lose popular support and have to face all the blame that comes with supporting the military’s monochromatic policies. If, however, they dare to disagree like Nawaz Sharif did, they would lose the institution’s backing just as Sharif lost it over the years. Then we would see them becoming targets of similar viciousness and possibly adverse judicial verdicts.

Unfortunately, the election on July 25 will not rid Pakistan of that tension.

The writer is director for South and Central Asia at the Hudson Institute in Washington D.C. and was Pakistan’s ambassador to the US between 2008-11. His latest book is Reimagining Pakistan



Written by Husain Haqqani...lol!!!
 
.
Indian govt file a case and won, and its good example of recovering the dirty money properties proceeding recovered by the native land. I will dig in and post. I think it was money laundering case , same like Nawaz.
Case is not yet won until the money is recovered. It is just the starting point, we just proved that the guy took loan and misappropriated. Simply meaning there was financial impropriety committed in India. Now we need to prove that properties/wealth in UK was indeed bought from that money which is the hardest part.

The guy has already laughed off saying there is nothing much in his name and if there is any thing they can seize it. He is on record saying he is a homeless person !

He is not a British national if he didnt return he wouldve been recalled through interpol plus his Pakistani propertues wouldve been cinfiscated and auctioned on court orders
He was stuck between a rock and a hard place also he was fooled by turncoats about reception media and public would give him on his return but hats off to Askari sahab and Dr Shahid Masood they ruined his plan
dude you cannot issue a interpol alert just like that, they have to prove he committed some crime. He can get away by saying that there is political vendetta against him. As far as properties in pakistan is concerned they can do any thing with those as they come under pakistan govt thats never in question.
 
.

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom