South Asia Analysis Group 


Paper no.262

25. 06. 2001

  

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COUNT-DOWN TO INDO-PAK SUMMIT-IV

by B.Raman

Is Pakistan's self-styled President and Chief Executive, Gen.Pervez Musharraf, Kemal Attaturk, as he imagines himself to be or the late Gen. Yahya Khan, whose lack of lucidity led Pakistan to division and disaster, is the question being debated in Pakistan after his incomprehensible actions of June 20 in humiliating former President Mohammed Rafique Tarar, a Punjabi, in total disregard of its impact on Punjabi politicians and military officers, serving and retired.

Even Gen. (retd) Mirza Aslam Beg, the first Mohajir Chief of the Army Staff under Mrs.Benazir Bhutto and Mr.Nawaz Sharif, has expressed his unease over the actions of Gen.Musharraf and described them as possibly taken "under compulsions" without explaining under whose or what compulsions.

In the face of the widespread unhappiness, particularly in the Punjab, the General mounted a damage-control exercise on June 23 and received the President of the anti-Nawaz faction of the Pakistan Muslim League (PML), known as the PML (Like-minded LM), Mian Muhammad Azhar, to soften the Mian's displeasure over the General's action in dissolving the National Assembly and the Senate in violation of the promise made by the General to the Mian on June 11 that he would help the faction in securing a majority in the two Houses by pressurising the supporters of Mr.Nawaz Sharif to cross the floor and thereafter invite the Mian to take over as the Prime Minister.

The General was reported to have denied speculation that he intended nominating Mr.Shaukat Aziz, the Finance Minister, or Mr.Abdul Sattar, the Foreign Minister, as the Prime Minister and claimed that he would continue to function as the Chief Executive too.  In order to keep the anti-Nawaz group allied to him, the General also reportedly hinted at the possibility of his nominating the Mian as the Prime Minister after his return from India.

Pakistani observers have described the General's discussions with the Mian as intended to counter the criticism not only in the public, but also amongst the Punjabi officers of the Army and the religious and jihadi parties over his unceremonious sacking of Mr. Tarar, known to be close to the Punjabi officers and the religious/jihadi elements.

Unlike Mrs. Benazir Bhutto's Pakistan People's Party (PPP), whose following is confined to Sindh, the North-West Frontier Province (NWFP) and the Seraiki areas of the Punjab, the PML is essentially a Punjabi party with many of its leaders and cadres having relatives serving as commissioned officers in the Army.

The support of at least some sections of the PML is essential for the General to ensure that the unhappy Punjabi political leaders and officers do not unite against him.  He is, therefore, keen to keep the anti-Nawaz faction, despite its small strength, on his side.

After the discussions with the General, the Mian met the senior members of his faction at the residence of Secretary-General Gohar Ayub Khan, and briefed them.  Amongst those who attended were Syed Fakhr Imam, Begum Abida Hussain, Col (retd) Ghulam Sarwar Cheema, Ijaz-ul-Haq, son of the late Gen.Zia-ul-Haq, Lt-Gen (retd) Majeed Malik and Mansoor Hayat Taman. After the meeting with the Mian, Gen. Musharraf has invited politicians representing leading political parties for a consultative meeting on June 27 to discuss his forthcoming summit with the Indian Prime Minister, Mr.A.B.Vajpayee, and to evolve a national consensus on what should be his approach during the summit.  The invitees have been told that the discussions would be strictly confined to the summit and that they would not be allowed to raise the recent domestic political developments.

Amongst those reportedly invited are: Mr. Farooq Leghari, former President and the chief of the Millat Party; Mr.Ghulam Mustafa Jatoi, former Prime Minister and chief of the National People's Party (NPP); Mr.Wasim Sajjad, ex-Chairman of the Senate (PML); Mr.Illahi Bux Soomro, ex-Speaker of the National Assembly (PML); Mr.Hamid Nasir Chattha, chief of the PML (Junejo); Pir Pagaro, President of the PML (Functional); Mian Muhammad Azhar, chief of the PML (like-minded); Mr.Aftab Ahmad Shaikh of the MQM; Makhdoom Amin Faheem, senior Vice-Chairman of the PPP; Mir Hazar Khan Bijarani of the PPP-SB; Nawabzada Nasrullah Khan, President of the Alliance For the Restoration of Democracy (ARD); Maulana Shah Ahmad Noorani, chief of the Jamiat-ul-Ulema Pakistan (JUP); Qazi Hussain Ahmad, chief of the Jamaat-e-Islami (JEI); Maulana Fazlur Rehman, chief of the Jamiat-ul-Ulema Islam (JUI(F)); Maulana Samiul Haq, chief of the JUI(S); Dr Tahirul Qadri, chief of the PAT; Allama Sajid Ali Naqvi, chief of the Tehrik Jaffria Pakistan (TJP); Air Chief Marshal (retd) Asghar Khan, President of the Tehrik-i-Istaqlal; Mr.Imran Khan, chief of theTehrik-i-Insaf; Mr.Ajmal Khattak, chief of the NAPP; Mr.Asfandyar Wali Khan, chief of the Awami National Party (ANP); Mr.Hasil Bizenjo of the Balochistan National Party (BNP); Dr Abdul Hayee Baloch of the Balochistan National Movement (BNM) and Fatehyab Ali Khan of the Mazdoor Kisan Party. After this meeting with the political leaders, the General intends meeting collectively religious leaders not belonging to any political party and non-governmental opinion-makers.  It is reported that he also intends having an unannounced meeting with the office-bearers of the jihadi organisations.

The ARD is to hold a meeting of its constituents on June 26 to decide its response to the invitation.  The following different views presently prevail in the Alliance:

* It should reject the invitation on the ground that it does not recognise the General as the President of the country.

* It should accept the invitation on condition that the recent domestic political developments should also be discussed first before taking up the forthcoming summit.

* It should accept the invitation without conditions and at the meeting with the General question his sacking of Mr.Tarar and, if the General rules out a discussion on this, walk out.

* Even if it accepts the invitation, only the Nawabzada should attend and not the leaders of the other constituent parties.

The leaders of the PML loyal to Mr.Nawaz Sharif and the PPP have been saying that whatever be the final decision of the ARD, their leaders would not attend a meeting convened by an illegally sworn-in President.  Anyhow, the General has not invited any other leader of the PML except the former Speaker of the National Assembly and the former Chairman of the Senate, who have been invited by virtue of the offices held by them before the dissolution of the two Houses on June 20.  Moreover, they have been taking a neutral stand in the factional struggle by attending the meetings of the PML as well as the PML (LM).

The PML has claimed that the General's talks with the Indian Prime Minister would be a failure as he lacked public support.  It said: "The Indian Premier enjoys the confidence of millions of voters while General Musharraf only has the support of the GHQ.  He is in no position to represent Pakistan.  Pakistan has never had an edge over India regarding defence or influence.  We only had the moral edge and have always been claiming the right of vote for the Kashmiris.  When our representative would not be an elected one, how can he advocate plebiscite in held Kashmir"?

Talking to pressmen on June 23, the Nawabzada said that if Gen Musharraf considered himself a valid President, the Constitution had ceased to exist, but if the Constitution was still in existence, the General was an illegal head of state.  He pointed out that if the Constitution was still in force as ordered by the Supreme Court while validating the army coup of October 12,1999, a serving public servant could not hold the office of President.  To qualify as a candidate for the post of President under the Constitution, the General would have to resign first from the Army and then wait for at least two years. Under the Constitution, no public servant can contest for election as the President within two years of his exit from public service.  Answering a question, the ARD President said Gen Musharraf's visit to India would fail to produce any results and the optimism being expressed by him was unjustified.

Meanwhile, in an interview to the CNN before leaving Washington, the Foreign Minister, Mr. Abdul Sattar, said: " What we have sought from the United States on the issue of Kashmir is not really a mediating role, but, on the contrary (we want) the use of influence in whatever way Washington thinks appropriate to nudge the two sides in favour of arriving at an initial understanding so that they can move them in the direction of the settlement that is acceptable to the Kashmiri people.

"General Musharraf will visit India with an open mind.  President Musharraf will be flexible, but I think people need to understand the limits of that flexibility and the fact that Kashmir question involves the life and future of more than 10 million people.  Over the last 12 years more than 75,000 Kashmiris have died in pursuit of their struggle for freedom.  So, they (Kashmiris) have to be on the centre stage.  They have aspirations with regard to their future.  We have to determine the solution that can endure.

"The other things that might come up during the President's visit to India will depend upon the initiatives by the Government of India.  We have said that we are prepared to discuss Kashmir and any other issues that India thinks can be discussed at this time.  It is going to be a short visit and there will be an opportunity for the two sides to meet and then perhaps to agree to continue this process of dialogue in the months ahead.

"General Musharraf's decision to become President is largely inspired by domestic considerations.  We are in the process of reconstructing democracy and elections are to be held before October 12, 2002.  The existing assemblies, which were suspended in October 1999, have been dissolved and this will set the stage for elections next year."

Talking to pressmen at Lahore on June 17, former Interior Minister under Mr.Sharif, Chaudhry Shujaat Hussain, who now belongs to the PML (LM), said that Pakistan's conventional stance on Kashmir and the UN resolutions on the issue had not served any purpose and that, therefore, giving independence to the valley should be actively considered.

He said that Jammu and Ladakh should be handed over to India and the valley should be given an independent status, while the "Azad Kashmir" (POK) should remain with Pakistan.  He, however, clarified that those were his personal views and that if his party adopted a different line after a debate, he would abide by the decision.

Mian Azhar has, however, described the Chaudhry's views as his personal opinion and reiterated the support of his party for the implementation of the UN resolutions

On June 23, the Pakistan Foreign Office held a co-ordination meeting to discuss the stand of Pakistan on the Iran-Pakistan-India gas pipeline issue during the forthcoming summit.  Amongst those who attended were Secretary Water and Power, Mr. Mirza Hamid Hassan, senior Joint Secretary, Petroleum and Natural Resources, Mr.Jehangir Bashar, Pakistan's Commissioner on the Permanent Indus Water Commission, Syed Jumait Ali Shah, and representatives of the Ministry of Commerce and Industries.

Mr.Bashar later told pressmen: "We would be quite happy to discuss the pipeline issue, but we are not aware whether or not it is on the agenda for the summit."

Amongst other possible summit subjects on which the Foreign Office proposes to hold similar co-ordination meetings are what has been described as the proposed construction of a 450MW Baglihar Hydropower Project on the Chenab by India, the Wullar Barrage on the Jehlum and the possible purchase of diesel by Islamabad from New Delhi.

Pakistani Foreign Office officials have been saying that the substantive aspects of the summit would be finalised when Pakistan's High Commissioner in New Delhi, Mr Jehangir Ashraf Kazi, arrived in Islamabad in a week's time.  However, according to them, both sides would try to keep the agenda flexible, as being rigid on the Kashmir issue did not work in the past.  They project the summit more as a brain-storming session between the General and the Indian Prime Minister to find ways of keeping the bilateral dialogue on the Kashmir issue sustained in a positive and constructive direction with which both sides are comfortable than as a formal negotiation on the Kashmir issue. They rule out the preparation in advance by the officials of the two countries of the drafts of any joint communique or declaration similar to the Lahore Declaration and say that this would actually depend upon the results of the meetings between the two leaders. The drafting of any such documents would be done only if warranted by the outcome of the discussions.

Pakistani Foreign Office officials have been quoted as saying as follows: "Everything would be subject to the progress at the summit.  Let us see how the leaders click with each other and what kind of chemistry they manage to establish in the course of their dialogue.  In a summit like this, particularly involving India and Pakistan, you cannot expect a pre-determined format."

They have also been hinting that the Hurriyat leaders might be invited to a reception being hosted by the Pakistan High Commissioner in honour of the General.

There has been speculation in circles close to the Pakistan Foreign Office that the General has been handling all matters pertaining to the summit directly with Mr.Kazi, the High Commissioner, through Maj.Gen. (retd) Mahmud Ali Durrani, former station chief of the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) in Washington and an active member of the Belusa group of Mrs. Shirin Tahir Kheli, without keeping Mr.Sattar in the picture and that this is another reason for the unhappiness of Mr.Sattar as reflected in his hardline statements.

It is speculated in Islamabad that when the Indian Government made its first statement on May 26 about its decision to invite the General, Mr.Kazi was already aware in advance of the impending change in the Indian position of no talks with the General till Pakistan stopped support to cross-border terrorism and that was why, on the basis of prior instructions from Maj.Gen.Durrani without the knowledge of Mr.Sattar, he welcomed the Indian decision immediately without consulting his Foreign Office.

After seizing power in October, 1999, Gen.Musharraf had recalled to Islamabad all political appointees of Mr.Sharif heading Pakistani diplomatic missions abroad.  The only Head of Mission not recalled was Mr.Kazi, despite his known proximity to Mr.Sharif and the controversial role allegedly played by him in having Mr.Najam Sethi, the Editor of the "Friday Times", arrested and harassed by the Punjab Police for making at the India International Centre, New Delhi, a speech critical of Mr.Sharif.

As pointed out by this writer in a paper disseminated after the coup, well-informed Pakistani observers considered this very significant and interpreted this as indicative of the desire of the General to use Mr.Kazi, stated to be a Balochi, to build bridges of informal contact with the Indian leadership and bureaucracy.  The General reportedly felt that unlike a Punjabi, a Balochi or a Sindhi would have greater access to official and non-official circles in New Delhi and could, therefore, play a more useful role in arranging a summit. 

(The writer is Additional Secretary (retd), Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, and, presently, Director, Institute for Topical Studies, Chennai. E-Mail: corde@vsnl.com )

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