January
14, 2013
By Saeed Qureshi
The first fugitive is Pervez Musharraf, the former COAS and president of Pakistan. The second is Hussain Haqqani, the former ambassador of Pakistan to the United States and
the third is Altaf Hussain, the
Chairman, founder and godfather of the MQM.
They cannot go back to their own country Pakistan for specific reasons.
Pervez Musharraf will be
hunted down by the religious outfits for his role in sending army to the FATA against the militants, mostly Taliban. He could also
be targeted by al-Qaida operatives and other religious militants for ordering
attack on the Lal Masjid and affiliated religious Jamia Hafsa Madrassa (the religious seminary) in July 2007 in which reportedly
154 lives were lost and many more were injured.
During his presidency, four
attempts were made on the life of Musharraf but each time he escaped unhurt.
These attacks were made by the groups like Harkat-ul-Mujahideen al-Alam and
other affiliates of Taliban within Pakistan. Two such attempts were made during
the Lal Masjid siege and one
after its completion.
General Musharraf who now resides
in London has several criminal cases pending against him. One is about the
missing persons, the second about as an accomplice in the murder of PPP chairperson Benazir Bhutto and providing inadequate security to her during her
public meeting in Rawalpindi on December 27, 2007.
He is also accused of ordering the
assassination of the Baloch leader Akbar Bugti. But apart from that, the Bugti clan is after his life and hefty award has been set aside
by the family for anyone who would kill Musharraf.
Pervez Musharraf is currently
the president of All Pakistan Muslim League. He wanted to return to Pakistan
early 2012 for preparation of the elections and to mobilize his party and
organize it. But he had to postpone that plan after the then ISI chief, general Shuja Pasha persuaded him to call off his return to Pakistan.
In the meantime there have been
calls from the political parties and socio-political
and religious circles to arrest him through the Interpol if
necessary. But perhaps there are several legal glitches that have saved the
former president from this dreadful eventuality.
For instance, the “Abbottabad
district and Sessions judge in a missing persons’ case, passed judgment asking
the authorities to declare Pervez Musharraf
a proclaimed offender. On 11 February 2011 the Anti Terrorism Court issued an
arrest warrant for Musharraf and charged him with conspiracy to commit murder
of Benazir Bhutto. On 8 March 2011,
the Sindh High Court registered
treason charges against him”
It appears Pervez Musharraf has not future in Pakistan and he will have to
lead the rest of his life in exile. His case is similar to a former president
of Pakistan General Iskander Mirza who died in obscurity and miserable conditions in London,
until his death on 12 November 1969.
The second prominent exiled figure
is Hussain Haqqani who served
at various prestigious posts, the last one being the ambassador of Pakistan in
Washington D. C. Before taking over the ambassadorial assignment, Mr. Haqqani had already enjoyed enormous clout within the United
States. His profile reveals that, “He served as an adviser to three former
Pakistani prime ministers and as envoy to Sri Lanka. Besides he was reputed as a prominent journalist, scholar
and educator. He is a Senior Fellow and Director for South and Central Asia at
the Hudson Institute in Washington, D.C.
Also he is co-editor of
Hudson's signature journal Current Trends in Islamist Ideology, the Director of the Center of International
Relations. He is very intelligent sharp and intellectual. He is a good speaker
and an astute analyst of the international affairs. The former ambassador is
nowadays serving in Boston University of the US as a Professor of International
Relations.
But there are good times and
there are bad times in a man’s life. Mr. Haqqani has fallen not only on bad but worst times. All of sudden
his exceptional ability and distinctive career seems to be blown up
in the air and turned useless. He is now looked upon as a traitor to Pakistan.
His
sudden yet steep debacle and downfall took a start from the day Osman bin Laden
was killed in Abbottabad by the
American Navy Seals. The PPP government
apprehended the likelihood of army taking over the power. That was perhaps a
misplaced apprehension, yet it turned to be an egregious misfortune and an
'Achilles Heel' for Ambassador Haqqani.
Mansoor Ijaz an American
businessman of Pakistani ancestry alleged that former Pakistan Ambassador to
the United States Hussain Haqqani asked him to deliver a confidential memo to Mike Mullen the Chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Through the memo the US assistance was sought in
averting a military takeover of the civilian government in Pakistan in the wake
of the Osama bin Laden raid, and to
assist in a civilian takeover of the military apparatus.
The Supreme Court of Pakistan
constituted a judicial commission to investigate the origin, purpose and
authenticity of the memorandum. The three-member judicial commission concluded
in their report released on June12,2012 that “the memo had been written under
instructions from Haqqani, and that, in
doing so, the Ambassador was not loyal to Pakistan and had sought to undermine
the security of the country’s nuclear assets, the armed forces, the
Inter-Services Intelligence and the Constitution”. Haqqani criticized the judicial commission as one-sided and noted
that the commission was not a court of law with the authority to establish
guilt or innocence.
The Supreme Court, upon hearing the
report in session, ordered the former ambassador to appear before the bench in
its next hearing and adjourned the case for two weeks until early July 2012.
During that period Mr. Haqqani presented
himself briefly before the court. Thereafter he left for
Untied States although he promised to the court that he would reappear within
four days. A larger bench of apex court headed by chief justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry will now hear the case on January 28.
The last hearing of memo case was
held on November 13 2012, in which Haqqani didn’t appear due to security concerns. .The chief justice
remarked during the November hearing that “If he does not come back in
accordance with judicial order, the court would be bound to issue an order and
then Hussain Haqqani would have
to come back under his personal security". In response to court’s orders
Mr. Haqqani stated on 14th January
that “how I will return to the country with no security assurance”
Unfortunately, Haqqani seems to be caught in a proverbial situation of caught
“between deep sea and devil”. It is evident that like president Musharraf, Mr. Haqqani too will live abroad without ever returning to Pakistan
unless there is miracle that turns the events upside down.
The third VVIP in self-exile is
Altaf Hussain. Altaf Hussain sneaked
out of Pakistan one month before the launching of the Operation Clean-up (June
19, 1992 to August 14, 1994). His flight from Pakistan also was the
result of an attempt on his life on 21 December 1991 that was the third of its
kind. He was given political asylum by the British government and is staying
ever since in London.
Recently the MQM boss announced that he was about to launch a drone attack
by which it was speculated that he was finally returning to Pakistan. But in
his lengthy speech he categorically announced that he had no plans to come back
to Pakistan.
Understandably, he cannot return to
Pakistan to face several thousand cases of very serious import pending against
him. Moreover there could be mortal danger to his life from his opponents who
have deep-seated grudge and bitterest feelings of revenge against him. His
cases too, along with many thousand other convicts, were pardoned under NRO issued by Pervez Musharraf
on October 5, 2007. Yet after the Supreme Court of Pakistan declared it
unconstitutional on 16 December 2009, all dropped cases stand revived.
Could these powerful celebrities
had ever imagined that with all their clout, powers, magnificence and
overwhelming loyalty and support of their adherents, they would fall to such a
depth of ignominy, disgrace and even isolation? The power, pelf and their
prestigious positions have proven to be ephemeral spells that drifted away like
the spent-up clouds.
The moral lesson of such bleak
situations is to serve the community, country and the people with honesty,
sincerity and selflessness and to walk the right, righteous path. Such a
path leads to the lasting gratitude during life and an immortal reverence after
death in the hearts of the people that one had served. One such glowing example
is that of the Quaid-e-Azam.
why not Allama Iqbal [because perhaps you are not for Islam
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