Smokers’ corner: Controlled democracy
Three days from today, Pakistanis will be heading to cast their votes in the country’s 11th general elections since 1970. This will also be the first time the country will elect a government after two previous democratically-elected governments completed their full terms. This is something to rejoice because till 2008 no other elected government — apart from the one that was elected in 1970 — managed to complete its five-year term.
However, even in 1970, the government which came to power could only do so after the country’s erstwhile eastern wing (East Pakistan) broke away to become Bangladesh in 1971. The new governing party, Z.A. Bhutto’s populist PPP, had actually won the second largest number of seats in 1970. The largest number of seats was won by the Bengali nationalist Awami League (AL) which rebelled against the Pakistani state’s hesitancy to hand over power to the AL. The PPP, on the other hand, refused to play second fiddle to a majority party which was entirely made up of Bengali nationalists.
The violent commotion following AL’s rebellion and East Pakistan’s deadly departure threw up numerous political, economic and social issues. Immense economic, ethnic and ideological polarisation in the country had already surfaced in the late 1960s — especially in the shape of a concentrated protest movement against the Ayub Khan regime. And it was correct for most political parties to demand parliamentary democracy as a way to resolve the problems emanating from the polarisation.
Democracy has always managed to resolve society’s most complex issues and tensions. But trying to control it has always resulted in disaster
Through concrete historical examples, one can quite convincingly assert that democracy has always managed to resolve a society’s most complex issues and tensions.
And, in theory, the results of the 1970 general election did just that. The AL’s sweep in East Pakistan clearly highlighted the fact that the state’s way of aggressively bringing Pakistan’s ethnic diversity into an undemocratically-conceived monolithic whole had failed. It had actually ended up creating severe ethnic fissures.
The PPP’s sweep in West Pakistan, on the other hand, highlighted the economic resentments which had reached a boiling point outside the cosmetic edifice created by the state. But in 1970, West Pakistan’s political and economic elite were not willing to accept the possible solutions delivered by the electorate. The results of this reluctance were disastrous.