Govt and Politics Pakistan
A. Military Rule
Three-fourths of Pakistan’s life as an independent nation
has been spent under military rule. Common Explanations re Military Rule in Pakistan:
- Diversity
(linguistic and ethnic) have caused regional tensions and successive
failures in forming a Constitution.
- Pakistan
has been burdened with full-scale wars with India, a strategically exposed
northwestern frontier, and a series of economic crises.
- It
has difficulty in allocating economic and natural resources equitably.
- It
has faced the dilemma of reconciling the goal of national integration with
the imperatives of national security.
But these problems are not
unique to Pakistan – all countries in South Asia face these to a greater or
lesser extent.
Two failures account for the
lack of democracy:
- ideological ŕ
what shd be the basis of Pakistani state?
& ŕ lack of a pro-Pakistan (positive) identity/model
of politics
- institutional
ŕ absence
of national political parties
& ŕ their opportunism (using bureaucracy &
military to crush political opposition; focus on making money for themselves)
B. Islamic Parties
The influence of Islamic parties in Pakistani politics and
government not correlate to their electoral strength
- Few Pakistanis support a
theocratic state
- Islamist parties have no
economic agenda
- Islamist parties divided and
have small, mostly regional/ethnic support bases.
- After Zia introduced Shariat
Laws, in-fighting among Islamists re which version of Islamic law is truly
Islamic? ŕ sectarian violence
- Islamists aligned with
military rulers, hence not popular with other political parties ŕ no popular support in
democratic elections
- Attempts at unity (into
Islami Jamoori Ittehad) => loss of identiy as well as charges of
corruption.
- Rise of militant islamist
factions ŕ more violence and more popular alienation
- End of the Afghan War in 1989
ŕ no clear purpose/enemy ŕ focus on Kashmir and
inspiration/guidance from Taleban.
Factors that have helped to bolster their growing role in Pakistan?
C. Madrassas
Pakistani state has been unable to provide for mass
education, either due to lack of resources or the lack of political will.
Religion-based schools (madrassas) fulfill this need.
-
Problem of narrow curriculum (good or bad?)
-
Pakistan govt has been provided with massive economic aid
to “secularize” the madrassas. (how?)
-
Problems of interference in religious schools