'Pak Judicial crisis to mend civil-military ties'

By Staff
|
Google Oneindia News

Lahore, May 5: Former Pakistan army chief Jahangir Karamat has said the presidential reference against the Chief Justice and the protests triggered by the move may prove to be ''perhaps a step towards resolving the problems the civil-military relations'' have faced in the country.

Dawn newspaper quoted Karamat as saying during a lecture at Lahore University of Management Sciences yesterday that in the past a powerless judiciary had only sanctified the military's coming into power.

''When the current regime took over in 1999, there was a difference though. The Supreme Court gave it only three years to do what it wanted but those three years have now stretched into eight.'' He agreed with a questioner that the military had a lot to answer for and it had corporate interests as well.

Mr Karamat said civil-military relations had always remained 'difficult' in Pakistan. The difficulty 'started when politicians asked a serving military chief (Ayub Khan) to become the defence minister.' He argued that military was inherently aggressive and interventionist, and with inordinately large resources at its disposal and no challenge from other institutions to its supremacy, it would end up being where it was in Pakistan now - at the acme of power.

''The military has to be checked through legal and constitutional means as the United States and India have successfully done, despite having much bigger armies than Pakistan has," he said.

The former army chief was of the opinion that the country faced no immediate external threat. '' In fact, Pakistan has a lot going for it on the international scene,'' he declared.

He cited US strategic interests in Pakistan's neighbours, including Afghanistan, Iran, India and China, as a reason for the country facing no imminent threat of a war.

''For the first time, the US has political leverage with both Pakistan and India. It never had such leverage with India in the past and this should help create peace rather than war between the two countries,'' Mr Karamat said.

The country was exposed to dire internal threats, including challenge of providing infrastructure for its increasing population, human resource development, gap between economic performance and poverty alleviation, civil-military relations, governance and, above all, extremism, he noted.

''If we are unable to resolve these issues, they will become vulnerabilities which any other country can exploit.'' Pakistan, he emphasised, more than anything else, needed to put its own house in order to be able to secure its future.

UNI

For Daily Alerts
Get Instant News Updates
Enable
x
Notification Settings X
Time Settings
Done
Clear Notification X
Do you want to clear all the notifications from your inbox?
Settings X
X