The Dictator is gone! Long live the new dictator

پاکستان لڈجر | PAKISTAN LEDGER | پاکستاني کھاتا |Aug 21, 08 | Moin Ansari | معین آنصآرّی |

The General’s exit from Pakistani politics was celeberated from Khyber to Karachi. Even Al-Qaeda and the TTP chimed in. For a few hours it seemed that PPPP and the PMLN were on the same page.

Lady Macbeth’s advice to the craft Zardari was taken as gopel by Mr. 10%. “to beguile the the time–look like the innocent flower, but be the serpant under it”. The new dictator Mr. Zardair, the future president of Pakistan has fooled some of the people all the time, and all the people for some of the time. Only time will tell if he can fool all the people all the time.

A dictator doesn’t have to be in army clothes. Many other dictators in the world came without a unifor–The Shah of Iran, Mr. Marcos of the Phillippines, Pap Doc Duvalier etc etc.

With the PPPP in control of the center, the prime-ministership, the presidency, and the judiciary, the Pakistani people are looking at generational rule of the PPPP.

On one hand, the nomination of PPP Co-chairman Asif Ali Zardari to replace Pervez Musharraf as president appears to be a rather decisive stroke, which in itself bids relatively well for the Pakistani coalition government. The balance-tipping middle parties between Zardari’s PPP and Nawaz Sharif’s PML-N seems to have largely lined up behind Benazir Bhutto’s widower, giving it an apparent clear majority in votes (Pakistani presidents are elected by its parliament (National Assembly), not directly through national vote.)

But on the other hand, decisive or not, Zardari is the very embodiment of corruption – the very reason Pakistanis cheered Musharraf’s bloodless coup in 1999. And the fight between the PPP and the PML-N over the reinstatement of judges is central to Zardari’s corruption. The corruption charges against Zardari and his late wife, Benazir Bhutto, were essentially dropped by the current set of judges installed by Musharraf. And the reinstatement of the original judges means Zardari (or Mr. Benazir Bhutto, if one prefers) may well see them come back to life. Thus, the fight within the PML-N/PPP coalition.

And for all his faults, the level of corruption under Musharraf – one of his stated reasons for taking power – was lower. A Zardari presidency is a return to the old in that regard, and one reason why this coalition government may have been popularly elected yet will remain both fractured and unpopular in the eyes of the general Pakistani population. ‘The same, only different.’

With that context in mind, and excerpt from Pakistan’s Daily Times report today.

The Pakistan People’s Party (PPP), the major coalition partner in the federal government, has decided to nominate its Co-chairman Asif Ali Zardari as the next president of the country.
A source close to Zardari House told Daily Times that this decision had been taken by the top hierarchy of the PPP and the party’s Central Executive Committee (CEC) would formally announce the decision after its meeting on Friday (tomorrow).

“The Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) will endorse and second the PPP CEC’s recommendation to nominate Asif Zardari as a presidential candidate,” the source said.

He said in return for its support to the PPP, the MQM would continue to hold the office of Sindh governor besides joining the coalition in the centre and accepting ministerial slots in the federal cabinet at a later stage.

It has also been learnt that the PPP expects the Awami National Party (ANP) and Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam-Fazl (JUI-F) to also support the PPP CEC’s recommendation.

The Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N), however, wants the next president from Balochistan or NWFP. But the PPP hierarchy insists that the top offices in the country are a right of the major political party.

The PML-N, it should be noted, is thus seeking a president from a province currently wrestling with an insurgency directly afoot. This is not insignificant.

Matt Wade August 22, 2008
A PUSH is under way to install Asif Ali Zardari, the controversial widower of Benazir Bhutto, as the next president of Pakistan following the resignation of Pervez Musharraf.

Senior members of the Pakistan People’s Party, which Mr Zardari leads, are understood to be campaigning for his nomination. Several Pakistan newspapers say his candidacy will be formally announced by the PPP’s central executive committee later today.

Altaf Hussain, the leader of fourth-biggest party Muttahida Qaumi Movement, has also called for Mr Zardari to be made president. “Keeping in view the sacrifice of former prime minister Benazir Bhutto for democracy … the office of the president is the right of Asif Ali Zardari,” he said.

Bruce Loudon, South Asia correspondent in Islamabad | August 22, 2008

BENAZIR Bhutto’s controversial widower, Asif Ali Zardari, long derided as the “Mr 10 Per Cent” of Pakistani politics, is set to become the nuclear-armed Islamic nation’s next president after winning solid backing from MPs yesterday.

Mr Zardari’s 19-year-old son, Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, is expected to preside over a meeting in Islamabad later today of the dominant Pakistan People’s Party central executive committee at which the decision by the party’s members of the National Assembly will be formally endorsed.

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  2. I am very sad since Musharraf resigned because there is no leader in Pakistan. We, Pakistani, are in the darkest era of our history. Now, most corrupted person known as Mr. 10% will be the next president of Pakistan. What a joke?

    I am sorry to say that Pakistani are very naive and they dont know what is right & wrong and always move by the wind direction. No direction, no visions. It is said that Democracy is the rule of the people for the people by the people. But in Pakistan democracy is the rule of the landlord for the landlord by the lanlord, especially corrupted and thieves.

    I request all Pakistani people to think from their brain and try to bring genuine people in the politics not this Nawaz ganja or Zardari 10%. If Zardari elect as president then it will be the black day in the Pakistan history. God save Pakistan from these corrupted people. Long Live Pakistan….. Pakistan Zindabad…..Pakistan always first.

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