June 22, 2012
The appointment of Raja Pervez
Ashraf as a new prime minister of Pakistan is like adding insult to injury or
rubbing salt on the inflicted wound. If the previously proposed Prime Minister
Makhdoom Shahabuddin was a felon so is Raja Pervez Ashraf notoriously known as
Raja rental? One wonders as to why the PPP’s incumbent government is so barren
of the individuals with fair name and good reputation!
President Zardari, like a smart chessboard
king retreats and advances his foot soldiers as the situation demands. In his
latest move, in order to succeed the ousted prime minster Gillani, he has
brought to the fore another person who is up to neck in kickback scams. There
is no dearth of corrupt and greedy individuals in the hierarchy of the Pakistan
People’s Party. President Zardari would not like an honest and principled
person to be his associate in power either as minister or in the party office.
The outgoing Prime Minister Gillani was
corrupt yet was as much docile and subservient to the whims and prerogatives of
the president as the newly elected prime minister Raja Pervez Ashraf would be.
President Zardari wants rubber stamp persons, who with closed eyes should dance
to his tunes like puppets and follow his decisions and dictates with
unquestionable subservience.
There cannot be a better person than Raja
Ashraf for the kind of slavish mentality because of his sycophantic disposition
and low lying temperament. But his most
strident qualification is his unstinted and unconditional loyalty to the party.
Now when he stands elected and sworn in as
the 25th prime minister of Pakistan, Prime Minister Raja would find
a myriad of horrendous problems staring in his face. To be in power for PPP as
the majority party in these turbulent times is becoming a colossal challenge
for their loathsome mode of governance tarred with an abundance of abominable
scams and lurid scandals revolving around gross misuse of power and money
grabbing by every conceivable mean.
There are grave corruption
allegations pending against Raja Pervez Ashraf for receiving kickbacks in
rental power projects and buying properties in London. The Supreme Court of
Pakistan is hearing cases pertaining to these charges. Because of these cases,
he resigned his ministerial position under public and judicial pressure. Interestingly, the identical petitions were
filed by the then a cabinet colleague the Housing Minister Faisal Saleh Hayat as well as
PML-N MNA Khawaja Asif on deliberate favoritism in giving contracts for rental
power projects.
In compliance with a decision
of the Supreme Court, the National Accountability Bureau placed the names of 19
accused in the exit control list (ECL) for alleged irregularities and
non-transparency in rental power projects (RPPs). That list includes four ministers
including Raja Pervez Ashraf and four former secretaries. While the court
rescinded the RPPs, it also directed NAB Chairman Admiral (Retd) Fasih Bokhari
to proceed with corruption references against the culprits of this huge scam.
The NAB also seized property of 12 RPPs and asked the district coordination
officers and deputy commissioners concerned to take action if their owners
tried to transfer the property
The most daring and daunting challenge for
Raja Sahib would be to write to the Swiss courts for reopening the pending
money laundering cases against president Zardari. If Somehow Raja complies with
the verdict of the Supreme Court, he will earn the ire of his powerful and
crafty boss and might be replaced by someone else. If he ignores Supreme Court’s
directives, the impasse and collision with the judiciary would remain as rife
as it has been all along since the handing out of the verdict by the Supreme
Court of Pakistan.
The cases
against Zardari date to the 1990s, when he and Benazir Bhutto were alleged to
have laundered $60 million of graft money in Swiss banks, paid by companies
seeking lucrative contracts. The Swiss shelved the cases in 2008 after Zardari
became the president of Pakistan.
One would wonder how the incumbent prime
minister whose role is to fill the interim period till elections to be held
February 2013, deal with that guardian knot. His evasion, delay or refusal to
write might entail a similar action from the Supreme Court and the resultant
disqualification. To repeat the same argument, if per say, he writes a letter
howsoever diluted, it would have to be done with the express consent of the
principal accused president Zardari. On the contrary, in case of any
ambivalence exhibited by Raja Ashraf like his predecessor, he may also be
disqualified and shown the way-out.
But perhaps the PPP government wants to buy
time till the next elections so that it can proudly claim the completion of
full five years’ term in office. But does president Zardari stand a chance to
be reelected on the expiry of his term? If he is not reelected because of the
defeat of PPP in the general elections, what could be his reaction or strategy
to counter that situation?
Understandably the other party would prefer
to bring a head of state of their own choice. If president cannot return to the
presidency, his privilege or exemptions from legal actions would also be
lifted. Will he flee to the foreign sanctuaries or fight the legal battle?
So the coming few months seem to be strewn
with events that could be chaotic and extension of the ongoing political
turbulence and standoff on one side between the superior judiciary and the
government and between the parties in power and those in opposition on the
other. With the elections season drawing near, there cannot be any possibility
of a political truce or lull between the colliding parties until the
announcement of the elections dates.
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