SpArK
ELITE MEMBER
- Joined
- May 5, 2010
- Messages
- 22,519
- Reaction score
- 18
- Country
- Location
Can Musharraf win back Pakistan?
Pakistan's ex-president Pervez Musharraf plans to return from exile with a new political party. Will Pakistanis welcome him?
He is being hailed as Pakistan's big political comeback. The only trouble is, ex-dictator Pervez Musharraf hasn't actually come back yet. He's still residing in self-imposed exile in London but has managed to land himself in the media spotlight following the official launch of his political party earlier this month.
In the span of a few days he has been interviewed by several major media outlets including India's NDTV, the German magazine Der Spiegel and on ABC with Christiane Amanpour.
He even used the opportunity of his launch to apologise for some past errors. "Human beings make mistakes," said the 67-year-old former general, who plans to return home before the next elections.
But the question is, has he learned anything from past mistakes? Scratch beneath the surface and nothing much has changed beyond his usual nationalistic jingoism and sloganeering of "Pakistan first" a phrase he likes to use often. In fact, over certain key foreign policy issues his stance is deeply hawkish.
On Afghanistan, for instance, while the majority of people in Europe and the United States now favour bringing troops home, Musharraf is pushing for more war. He told the BBC Radio 4 Today programme: "There is a failure of leadership. Nobody is educating the people who are demanding their soldiers [should] come back that this would be the worst decision. This will be a blunder."
Yet his gung-ho performance shouldn't surprise anyone. This is person who, in an interview with the Washington Post when he was in power, said of gang-**** victim Mukhtar Mai: "You must understand the environment in Pakistan. This has become a moneymaking concern. A lot of people say if you want to go abroad and get a visa for Canada or citizenship and be a millionaire, get yourself raped."
Musharraf later backtracked and said he was not "so silly and stupid" as to make such comments. To demonstrate that this was a lie, the Washington Post subsequently released the audio of the interview on its website.
But he isn't always so blunt in interviews. Last week when Amanpour interviewed Musharraf, an important issue was raised when she asked him why so many Pakistanis have an unfavourable view of the United States in spite of the billions of dollars being poured in. "Yes those are the ground realities," he said. "This is because of what they have suffered historically and what is going on. And lack of understanding on both sides of the ground realities."
His answer conveniently missed one crucial point. It's a point which neither the leaders of the US nor Pakistan seem prepared to hear: that the more the US pours money into the hands of Pakistan's corrupt rulers, the more empowered anti-democratic forces in the country have become. So there is almost an inverse relationship between foreign aid to the government and the battle for hearts and minds.
Meanwhile, back home, news of Musharraf's return to politics has led to an alarming new development. Talal Bugti, chief of the Jamhoori Watan party, has announced a bounty of 1bn rupees ($11.6m) for Musharraf in connection with "crimes against humanity". He accuses the former dictator over the murder of his father, the late Baloch leader Nawab Akbar Bugti, and has called for the government to use Interpol to bring the former dictator back to face the charges against him.
With many enemies eager to settle old scores, the question is, who exactly is supporting Musharraf? Here is a hint from the man himself. "I launched my Facebook page eight months ago," Musharraf told Der Spiegel last week. "Today I have more than 315,000 fans." In fact, since he did that interview the number has jumped to more than 325,000 an impressive feat.
Unfortunately the majority of people in Pakistan don't have Facebook. They don't even have access to the internet.
Syed Hamad Ali
Can Musharraf win back Pakistan? | Syed Hamad Ali | Comment is free | guardian.co.uk