On disobedience

Published August 31, 2023
The writer is an author.
The writer is an author.

IT began with Adam. John Milton blamed him for the world’s woes in this fiery opening to his epic poem Paradise Lost: “Of Man’s First Disobedience, and the Fruit/Of that Forbidden Tree, whose mortal taste/Brought Death into the World, and all our woe.”

With woes, disobedience came with some compensating virtues. The playwright Oscar Wilde contended that “Disobedience … is man’s original virtue. It is through disobedience that progress has been made [,] and rebellion”.

A recent rebel — Edward Snowden of WikiLeaks fame — argued: “Sometimes to do the right thing, you have to break a law [.] You have to make sure that what you’re risking, what you’re bringing onto yourself, does not serve as a detriment to anyone else.”

In Pakistan, disobedience is the fourth injunction, omitted from our national motto. Disobedience has become the new norm — whether to the laws of God, to the Constitution, to man-made laws, Rules of Business, or to the orders of a superior.

Traffic rules are disobeyed. Tax laws are disobeyed. Jail manuals are disobeyed.

In October 2021, the then chief of army staff Gen Qamar Bajwa announced the transfer of Gen Faiz Hameed from the post of DG ISI to commander Peshawar Corps. The appointment was notified by the ISPR on Oct 6 (No PR-165/2021-ISPR). Prime minister Imran Khan (it is said at the transferee’s behest) held the COAS’s order in abeyance. Six weeks later, in November, Gen Hameed obeyed his chief’s orders and left the ISI. To some, such independence of action constituted disobedience to a higher institutional authority.

More recently, the principal secretary to the president, Waqar Ahmed, questioned the orders signed by his employer for reversion to the Establishment Division. The dislodged principal secretary retaliated with a confidential letter, which, though marked ‘For the Eyes of the President’, somehow leaked into the media. In it, he complained: “The decision to surrender my services isn’t based on justice.” He urged the president to “initiate an investigation into the matter through the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) or any relevant agency to uncover any misconduct”, adding, with misplaced bravado, that he was “prepared to testify before the Supreme Court or any other court”.

As if that disobedience was not bitter enough for the beleaguered president, Ms Humaira Ahmad, identified by the president as the replacement principal secretary, declined his offer even before orders for her transfer had been processed.

President Arif Alvi will complete his five-year term on Sept 9, 2023. All too conscious of the shelf life of his constitutional powers, he invited the chief election commissioner, Sikandar Sultan Raja, to meet him for consultation on the next election date. The CEC declined, fobbing him off with the humiliating rebuff that in his “considered view, participation in the meeting would be of scant consequence”.

However, the CEC did find the time the following day to meet the US ambassador Donald Blome to hear him pontificate on “the United States’ support for free and fair elections conducted in accordance with Pakistan’s laws and Constitution”.

Perhaps His Excellency detects a faint pulse in our Constitution and something still twitching in the laws of Pakistan that the Pakistani public no longer discerns. For them, the Constitution is no more than a perforated filigree of a once noble intent. Our laws, after 76 years of abuse and misuse,have become a discoloured Rubik’s cube, manipulated by legislators, politicians and lawyers alike to yield meanings of their choice.

Disobedience is now endemic in Pakistan. Traffic rules are disobeyed. Tax laws are disobeyed. Jail manuals are disobeyed. Rules of Business are disobeyed. Orders in civilian ink and military khaki are disobeyed. Judicial orders, even up to the eminence of the Supreme Court, are disobeyed. And now, we see the tra­vesty of our president — the constitutional symbol of 240 million Pakis­tanis — reduced to the level of an ineffective supplicant, like “an old Arab prematurely blind, whom the caravan has left behind”.

Two hundred and fifty years ago, in April 1774, the British parliamentarian Edmund Burke warned his myopic colleagues in Westminster: “Reflect how you are to govern a people, who think they ought to be free [.] Your scheme … yields nothing but discontent, disorder, disobedience”.

In today’s stygian gloom, where churches are desecrated, the homes of our Christian brethren torched and Bibles burned, it might serve as a palliative to recall St Paul’s Epistle to the Ephesians in the New Testament: “Let no one deceive you with empty words, for because of these things the wrath of God comes upon the sons of disobedience.”

Those who arrogate to themselves control of the destiny of 240m Pakistanis should not ignore these words. They do so — at our peril.

The writer is an author.

www.fsaijazuddin.pk

Published in Dawn, August 31st, 2023

Opinion

Editorial

Afghan strikes
Updated 26 Dec, 2024

Afghan strikes

The military option has been employed by the govt apparently to signal its unhappiness over the state of affairs with Afghanistan.
Revamping tax policy
26 Dec, 2024

Revamping tax policy

THE tax bureaucracy appears to have convinced the government that it can boost revenues simply by taking harsher...
Betraying women voters
26 Dec, 2024

Betraying women voters

THE ECP’s recent pledge to eliminate the gender gap among voters falls flat in the face of troubling revelations...
Kurram ‘roadmap’
Updated 25 Dec, 2024

Kurram ‘roadmap’

The state must provide ironclad guarantees that the local population will be protected from all forms of terrorism.
Snooping state
25 Dec, 2024

Snooping state

THE state’s attempts to pry into citizens’ internet activities continue apace. The latest in this regard is a...
A welcome first step
25 Dec, 2024

A welcome first step

THE commencement of a dialogue between the PTI and the coalition parties occupying the treasury benches in ...