During those three years, the author also had to handle curious contrary pulls. The chief minister’s son was the son-in-law of the governor and the governor’s son was married to the chief minister’s daughter. Despite this dual close bond, the governor would use the chief secretary as intermediary to frequently convey letters asking for transfers, postings of commissioners, deputy commissioners and other senior officials to replace them with his own nominees. Such letters from the governor would mostly arrive by messenger in the dead of night.
During the time that he was secretary, Federal Ministry of Information and Broadcasting (1987-88), Husain once received a midnight call from Ziaul Haq who said: “I think I am no longer the president of Pakistan in your eyes?” It later transpired that the president was most upset that in PTV’s Khabarnama earlier the same night, the duration of coverage given to prime minister Junejo was one whole minute more than the coverage given to the president’s activities. The author recalls with regret that Ziaul Haq had an almost obsessive interest in meeting foreign journalists which could reach “ludicrous limits”.
The author rightly laments that, commencing with Ayub Khan’s abrupt dismissal of several ICS officers in 1958-60, almost all governments which came thereafter (Yahya Khan’s, Bhutto’s, Zia’s, Benazir Bhutto’s, Nawaz Sharif’s, Pervez Musharraf’s) took arbitrary and capricious decisions adversely affecting the service structure and performance of government officials. These actions damaged the autonomy, impartiality and integrity of the CSP/DMG (District Management Group) cadres. Promotions, appointments, suspensions and transfers became subject to partisan and personal considerations. Along with a steep decline in the ethical norms of political and military rulers, the integrity of office-holders has become a rare quality. Financial corruption was always a malady of some. It then became a recurrent illness of many.
It is unpleasant yet unavoidable to record that the text of the book is replete with errors of syntax, spellings and grammar. The author alone should not be held responsible. Nor is this book unusual in this respect. It is distressing to note that three books written by prominent Pakistani personalities in English read in recent weeks, including the book under review, are marred by often appalling lapses in observing elementary rules for proof-reading and editing. Is such recurrence a sign of a decline in English language teaching, learning and proficiency, or is it sheer negligence by publishers?
The book’s title expresses individual resilience and institutional damage, hope as well as sadness. Despite the prevailing scenario in which competence and integrity are rare features, the bureaucracy is unavoidably an essential pivot for Pakistan’s progress. Reform is possible. There are some honest, capable, courageous civil servants. Their number has to increase to critical mass. Officials and leaders, civil and military, and citizens at large will find Husain’s book a source of insightful reflection and much-needed inspiration.
The reviewer is a former senator and federal minister, and is honourary chairman, Ardeshir Cowasjee Centre for Writing, IBA, Karachi.
Surviving the Wreck: A Civil Servant’s
Personal History of Pakistan
(MEMOIRS)
By Syed Munir Husain
ILQA Publications, Lahore
ISBN 978-9696400301
304pp.