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Islam and Pakistan’s Political Culture

Page 25

by Farhan Mujahid Chak


  followed, first rejected the Governor-General’s request for emergency power

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  and then, surreptitiously, allowed it. In the wake of these constitutional cases,

  the appointees of the Governor-General were considered ultra vires and there

  now needed to be a new Constituent Assembly.

  The constitution of 1956

  Following the federal court decision, a new Constituent Assembly was elected.

  Immediately, members began preparing a constitution and within eight

  months a first draft had been completed. Though Pakistan’s political system

  would remain parliamentary, a president and a vice-president were included,

  Constitutional development in Pakistan

  119

  each with expanded powers. The prime minister remained the head of the

  executive, but real power was entrusted to the president. ‘The draft provided

  for a strong centre; its framers were guided by the principle that maximum

  autonomy should be granted to the provinces’.35 Consequently, the division of powers had more enumerated areas in the provincial list, with areas such as

  Industries and Railways. Also, the provinces were given a residuary power,

  something that had never been given to them in the past. 36 The Objectives Resolution, described in the introduction to this chapter, was included as a

  preamble. As Khan states, ‘after nine years of effort, Pakistan succeeded in

  framing a constitution which became effective on 23rd of March 1956,

  proclaiming Pakistan as an Islamic Republic’. 37

  The 1956 Constitution declared Pakistan an ‘Islamic Republic’ wherein the

  principles of freedom, equality, tolerance and social justice, as enunciated by

  Islam, should be fully observed. Further Islamic provisions were contained in the

  ‘Directive Principles of State Policy’ but, interestingly, were not enforceable in

  the courts. They, only, were supposed to serve as a guide to state authorities

  for policy formation. According to the ‘Directive Principles’, steps needed to

  be taken to enable Muslims of Pakistan to order their lives in accordance with

  the Holy Qur’an and Sunnah. Further, ‘the state was to endeavour to provide

  facilities whereby Muslims might be able to understand the meaning of life

  according to the Qur’an and Sunnah, to promote amity and observance of

  Islamic moral standards and to secure the proper organization of zakat and

  waqf ’. 38 Yet no specific mechanism was institutionalized that would honour this commitment.

  Most importantly, the 1956 Constitution deemed that ‘no law could be

  repugnant to the Qur’an or Prophetic sayings’ and that existing laws ‘shall be

  brought into conformity with such injunctions’.39 Also, the National Assembly could only decide whether a law was repugnant to Islam. ‘Article 198 provided

  that the president should appoint, within one year of the day of commencement

  of the constitution, a commission to make recommendations for bringing

  existing laws into conformity with the injunctions of Islam and to specify the

  stages by which the measures should be brought into effect’. 40 They were also to compile, for the parliament, such Islamic injunctions as could be given

  legislative effect. It was made clear, too, that nothing become prejudicial to

  non-Muslims. It is crucial to recognize that the Islamic provisions were a

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  direct attempt to frame the constitution with ‘foundational’ values in mind.

  Tensions arose as to what exactly constituted those values and how to institu-

  tionalize them. Traditionalists and secularists were at odds concerning precise

  definitions and meanings. Eventually, the chronic bickering over definitions

  led to constitutional collapse.

  Collapse of the 1956 Constitution

  Pakistan began as parliamentary democracy; however, it was ill suited for that

  form of political organization. After the passing of the 1956 Constitution,

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  Islam and Pakistan’s Political Culture

  ‘within a short period of about two-and-a-half years (March, 1956 to October,

  1958) there were six changes of government, one of which lasted just for four

  hours and another four days’.41 Mahmud characterizes this as manipulative attempts by the president to subvert provincial autonomy, connecting it to a

  praetorian manoeuvre. 42 However, Mahmud’s analysis does not entirely reflect the immense disharmony that provoked presidential dismissals. Notwithstanding its illegality, dismissal was a result of the combative politics by over

  a dozen political parties. Actually, the situation was so bad that members of the

  Assembly violently attacked the deputy speaker of the House, who eventually

  died from his injuries.43 When Mahmud claims that a representative government was just around the corner, it doesn’t effectively portray the seriousness of the

  internal and political disorder. ‘The repercussions of this political instability

  were serious. The country’s economy was shattered. In East Pakistan the army

  had to be called twice to handle distribution of food and check smuggling

  across the border (with India). Millions of refugees, who had been living in

  sub-human conditions since 1947, remained neglected’.44

  During this disarray, ideological tensions were only further aggravating. And

  no-one quite understood how to manage these multiple crises. When Ghulam

  Muhammad became ill and unable to continue as Governor-General, Major-

  General Iskander Mirza assumed the Office of President in the interim period.

  He was a self-described secularist and the importance of connecting the present

  to an ethical current animating his society was unimportant. ‘He publicly voiced

  his conviction that religion and politics ought to be kept quite separate’, which

  displayed a remarkable ignorance of his own society and the ideological fore-

  fathers of the Pakistan movement.45 The prime minister, at that time, was Chaudhri Muhammad Ali and he selected Dr Khan Sahib as the Chief Minister

  of West Pakistan. Interestingly, Dr Khan Sahib, a close friend of Chaudhri

  Muhammad Ali, originally vehemently ‘opposed the creation of Pakistan and

  was a strong congressman’.46 It is striking to note that the very forces that were against the creation of ‘Pakistan as a model Islamic state’ were invested with

  the powers to steer the country toward that direction. Such brazen disregard for

  the sentimentality of people and cronyism was bound to conjure deep resentment.

  In addition, there was the ever-presence of ideological coercion. Khan

  mentions that ‘President Iskander Mirza had reconciled himself to having

  Suhrawardy as prime minister … (but) on three conditions: one, that he would

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  not alter Pakistan’s pro-Western foreign policy; two, that he would not meddle

  with the army; and three, that he would keep the left-wing Awami League, led

  by Maulana Bhashani, firmly in harness’.47 It was apparent that secularists, led by President Iskander Mirza, were enforcing their ideological vision on the

  rest of society, and, here, on Prime Minister Suhrawardy. Reacting, the tradi-

  tionalists were becoming increasingly hostile and aggressive in return. This

  presents a classic example of ideology leading to political
engineering, which,

  in turn, leads to political instability.

  Further troubling, the new Provincial Assembly in East Pakistan was

  demanding independence. Collectively, these issues forced the president to

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  abrogate the constitution and call in the army to restore order. On 8 October

  1958, President Mirza, along with General Ayub Khan, declared martial

  law.48 This use of the President’s power and the abrogation of the constitution resulted in yet another constitutional case.

  The Dosso case49

  The Dosso case expanded on the controversial ‘doctrine of necessity’ to

  include the legality of the usurpation of state power. Basing its theory on

  Hans Kelsen’s theory of ‘revolutionary legality’, the court concluded that any

  regime that has the people’s approval can gain legitimacy and is therefore a

  valid government. ‘If the revolution is victorious in the sense that the persons

  assuming power under the change can successfully require the inhabitants of

  the country to conform to the new regime, then the revolution itself becomes a

  law-creating fact because thereafter its own legality is judged not by reference to

  the annulled constitution but by reference to its own success’.50 Consequently, power became a legitimating factor in Pakistani politics, allowing for its

  usurpation. Naturally, in such a predicament, only those with physical/military

  strength are able to do so, thereby setting a precedent of ‘might is right’.

  Actually, it is this exact clause that has always been used to justify military

  rule in the country.51

  This judicial verdict had only one dissenting opinion – Justice Cornelius.

  The majority, led by Chief Justice Munir, ‘held that a victorious revolution

  or a successful coup d’état is an internationally recognized legal method of

  changing a constitution’.52 The dissent based his decision on the strict rule of the law, that any abrogation would constitute an illegal act. This constitutional

  case has been severely criticised by Mahmud53 and Newberg.54 While the former reiterated his theme of praetorian domination, the latter depicted a

  decision that was politically biased. Ultimately, this developed into a com-

  plete disregard for constitutionalism and prevented the establishment of an

  agreed-upon framework for politics.

  The third constitution: General Ayub Khan

  In 1958 General Ayub Khan became the martial law administrator and, soon

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  after, deposed President Iskander Mirza, initiating Pakistan’s first direct form

  of military rule. Chaudhury insists that the army was reluctant to enter the

  power game and did so under compulsion.55 However, there is clear evidence that as early as 1952 the military was becoming increasingly independent and

  was establishing its own linkages with foreign countries, particularly the US. 56

  This provides hard evidence of the military’s role in intervening in the political

  process and foreshadows the ongoing civil–military competition for political

  control. Nonetheless, recognizing that the constant instability was untenable,

  General Ayub Khan appointed a ‘Constitution Commission to determine

  what was failing within the country to bring about such disturbances and

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  Islam and Pakistan’s Political Culture

  ineffectiveness’.57 To aid their task, the Commission sent out thousands of questionnaires, in Urdu and Bengali, asking for people’s opinions. From the

  information gathered, they concluded that instability was rooted in three distinct

  issues:

  First, the role of Islam was ill-defined and torn between the orthodox

  [traditionalists] and modernists [secularists]; second, increasing calls for

  independence, centred on economic difficulties and disparities, were

  compounding the issue of East Pakistan’s autonomy; third, unless there

  were social, economic, and educational reforms, the possibility of having

  an effective universal franchise was impossible.58

  Interestingly, the most serious issue remained the role of Islam and combative

  competition between traditionalists and secularists. Then, in total disregard of

  the commission’s findings, the new constitution was thoroughly secularized.

  The constitution of 1962

  The 1962 Constitution contained 250 Articles, divided into 12 parts and 3

  schedules. Paralleling the 1956 Constitution, the Objectives Resolution remained

  as a preamble with minor semantic alterations. For instance, the first paragraph

  of the 1956 preamble – ‘authority to be exercised by the people of Pakistan

  within the limits prescribed by Him (Allah) is a sacred trust’ – became ‘within the

  limits prescribed by God’ in the 1962 Constitution; there was no reference

  to the fact that people would exercise authority.59 Presumably this was intended to avoid difficulties in determining the extent of those limits by competing

  ideological political actors. However, what may have been intended to

  decrease ideological bickering was in fact exacerbating. The 1962 Constitution

  renamed Pakistan the ‘Republic of Pakistan’, dropping the word ‘Islamic’. 60

  This clearly displayed Ayub Khan’s secularist mindset and is indicative of the

  confusion rampant throughout the political leadership, since even something

  so elementary could not be agreed upon.

  Yet that was not all. In a bid to compensate for that omission, the 1962

  Constitution contained significant Islamic provisions. It reaffirmed that the

  nation-state of Pakistan was based on an Islamic ideology and placed emphasis

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  on the principles of democracy, freedom, equality, tolerance and social justice,

  with the qualification that these principles should be observed as enunciated by

  Islam. Moreover, it reintroduced the 1956 constitutional passage that stated:

  ‘Muslims of Pakistan should be enabled individually and collectively to order

  their lives in accordance with the fundamental principles and basic concepts

  of Islam and should be provided with facilities whereby they may be able to

  understand the meaning of life according to those principles and concepts’.61

  In addition, the 1962 Constitution formulated the Council of Islamic Ideology

  that would offer policy options considering Muhammad Iqbal’s concerns – a

  revivalist approach. Likewise, ‘The Council of Islamic Ideology under the

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  123

  new constitution represents the first instance in modern history where an

  effort was made to bring Islam in contact with modern political, legal, ethical,

  social, and economic conditions and to present new and unanticipated problems

  for solution to a jurisprudence which has for almost one thousand years been in

  a static condition’.62 Yet, notwithstanding lip service paid to Islam, it remained without teeth or institutional guarantees. Essentially, the 1962 Constitution

  aims to say everything without any concrete method to do anything. And it

  was this confusion that was debilitating.

  The 1962 Constitution prescribed a strong executive power concentrated in

  the position of a president. The president was to be directly ele
cted to his

  position by an established electoral college of not less than 80,000 people. 63

  This system involved indirect franchise, which was implemented to facilitate a

  smoother functioning of the political system. The electoral colleges were

  responsible for government within their regions. Ayub Khan was against a

  universal direct franchise owing to the ‘genius of the people’.64 This system, called ‘Basic Democracy’, was an indirect election of the president based on

  restricted franchise. With this, Ayub Khan had hoped that partisan politics

  would be reduced.65 However, this system rested on the belief that people are incapable of deciding what is best for them. By restricting the electoral franchise, he directly contradicted the ‘foundational’ value of the people not collectively

  erring and, simply put, alienated most of his countrymen. Yet this should not

  be surprising, since most politicians come from the landowning and feudal

  classes of society that, rather than being harbingers of peace, justice and

  equality, perpetuate exploitation on a massive scale.66 The entire concept of the inherent equality of people is beyond their grasp.

  The 1962 Constitution, by abolishing the positions of the prime minister

  and vice-president, gave definitive authority to the president, with renewed

  powers of dissolution and veto. It was clear that the authors of this constitution

  took threats to the territorial integrity of Pakistan very seriously. So seriously,

  in fact, that their solution was to entirely consolidate power, stifling dissent. Of course, more funds were assigned to East Pakistan and the country became

  officially bilingual. Moreover, the Assembly would sit in Dacca, in East

  Pakistan, as opposed to Karachi, in West Pakistan. The question remained,

  however: was this enough? Achieving unity by disallowing dissent, by ideological

  imposition, and, instead, throwing some money at the situation, hoping to

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  resolve deep-seated, structural imbalances, was hardly stabilizing.

  Ayub Khan’s resignation

  During the 11 years of Ayub Khan’s rule the country prospered economically.

 

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