burst into tears and said he had never felt so ashamed in his life. Then he went and voted for the amendment, likely on the orders of his party. Cry me a river. If the desecration of the constitution – which is exactly what the 21st Amendment is – was so important to Rabbani he should have followed his conscience. Now he just comes off as the Hamlet of the Senate, whose dithering and emotionalism doesn’t prevent him from doing the wrong thing.
The JI and JUI-F at least abstained from voting for the amendment but did so for all the wrong reasons. They objected to the presence of words like ‘religion’, ‘sect’ and ‘madressah’ in the text of the amendment. These parties have no issue with the military issuing summary judgements against civilians so long as those civilians aren’t grouped according to religion. And even then, the religious parties did not object strongly enough to vote against the amendment; they just straddled the fence.
The PTI, which had publicly supported the military courts and then opposed them, didn’t have to go on the record since its members still haven’t realised they are part of a political party that is still boycotting the National Assembly.
Anger is directed at the politicians because they represent the people. The men in uniform might naturally feel like the country needs their iron fist. The idea of military courts was mooted, the army chief pushed for it and everyone – the odd tear aside – folded.
The only remaining hope is that the Supreme Court finds the amendment unconstitutional. There is not much reason to expect the judiciary to show the backbone our politicians lack. The current judiciary is less confrontational and has given the government a wide berth. It is almost enough to make one yearn for the days of Iftikhar Chaudhry who, whether through ego or principle, hated ceding any territory or influence to others. This is what the branches of government should be doing: jealously guarding every last bit of their power rather than gift-wrapping it and presenting it to others.
Parliament has decided it doesn’t want to govern and it just wants the judiciary to adjudicate. With one vote it has shown it will wrap up our system of government if that is what is popular, convenient and, most importantly, being demanded by the real power in the country.
This, not any overblown allegations of rigging, is the biggest problem with our democracy. It doesn’t require months on the streets of Islamabad to rectify. Just the ability to show up in parliament and cast a vote with your conscience would have been enough. Yes, our politicians are corrupt, craven and all of that. It would just have been nice if they were a little selfish – at least to the point of guarding their own power – too.
The writer is a journalist based in Karachi. Email: nadir.hassangmail.com