Thursday, April 30, 2009

timid as a church mousewhen the trampling of the constitutional process and democratic rights of the people

30
Apr
09

bar council and the chairman still relavant to be part of our system they make noise anything about islam but timid as a church mousewhen the trampling of the constitutional process and democratic rights of the people three times in the span of two years the lawyers, men and women in their somber black coats defied the illegal edicts of the government and succeeded in forcing the government to back down.

 Edit

bar council chairman, can you repeat what you said about the recent judicial appointment or rather promotion that it is on merit. by the way, do you want to be appointed as court of appeal judge? judges who have no shame. a disgrace not to the nation and a disgrace to their family and ancestors.

council president datuk ambiga sreenevasan, is it this all you can do? every time somethign drastic happens, continous statements will be released condeming this, condeming that. can bc do anything else beyond that. just press statements? lip service to show existence?

 senior opposition leader lim kit siang said how to judge the judge?mr najib’ senior opposition leader lim kit siang said ‘has piled up for himself another infamy - the trampling of the constitutional process and democratic rights of the people of perak,’why waste easy money to fight hard by election which we are going to lose anyway,

“life without lawyers” one thing scarier than a bus full of lawyers is a bus without them.the d.c. judge who sued his drycleaner for $54 million for losing his pants; lawyers drafting framed charges for crook government,writting judgement for sitting judges, looking at the legacy of our judicial system from the perspective of the lingam videos

 the courts cannot allow themselves to be perceived as an arena for “scripted plots” written by “certain producers”,raja muda of perak raja dr nazrin shah said yesterdaymany scrip which one ,syfool,mangolian,50million perak mission just excuted harapkan pagar,pagar makan padi kata orang tua yang berilmu

raised consciousness. and more and more aware people who can go beyond falsehood; and abhor from this evilness; see and speak to the truth of its nature, then there is hope. this dreadful prospect is not something that is our inescapable destiny. we still have a fine constitutional machinery that has served us well. all that is needed is that we do not undermine it and do not bulldoze it with brute force

the former finance minister said contests in a democracy are not a fight for survival which ever way you spin at end it is the people’s votes you have to beg where anything goes but a competition to serve and bn must reform to improve its ability to serve with distinction.

you can win an election then damn the constitutional duties, damn the official prerogative and damn the human rights. if election commission makes sound against any of these then damn the election commission. the supreme court is still too sacred to be touched…for now.

final part the rm50million mentri besar datuk dr zambry abd kadir can chop down tree of democracy and hide under the royal institution’s kain pelakat, he should hear this s’gor sultan: democracy is the most important, do not distort the constitution and this keep your emotions in check - raja muda of perlis

 the perceived biasness of the recent police actions in favour of umno will only lead to more discontent and disgust among a large portion of the people, there have been tyrants and murderers, and for a time they can seem invincible, but in the end they always fall. think of it… always.”desperate times and desperate measuresvice cannot take the place of virtue whatever may be the ends.”

was the sultan of perak blackmailed?a lesson of importance, non independent judiciary &the royals fear for their future vs humanity& powerfulpeole’s tsunami“humiliating and devastating”

latest editionthe constitution is still evolving and responding to the timesnaib presiden umno, datuk seri hishammuddin tun hussein ketua puteri umno, datuk rosnah abdul rashid shirlin,datuk noh omarr datuk seri mohamed khaled nordin,stop looting the intellegilence of impressionable minds of malaysians lap it up as the gospel truth,

 

inspector-general of police musa hassan can you clarify the name altantuya seditious? you once told that you had only diploma in law yet can be a …

 

we must uphold the fundamental principle that the only legitimate way of forming a government is through elections and never by any means of political meanderings.this is what you get when people are not aware of the full import of the rule of law and constitution.taming the unelected, this is what we get when rule of law is replaced with the rule of men

 

Civil Revolution May Usher A Constitutional Democracy In Pakistan

By Mirza Akhtar Beg   

 

Pakistan NavyPakistan avoided yet another crisis. Although oscillating between corrupt civilian governments and military dictatorships, crises have been a way of life for Pakistan. But this crisis was different. It was not particularly for or against a leader. It was the third act of a grass-roots movement, led by the lawyers, in favor of the rule of law under a constitutional framework.

Pakistan appears to be on the verge of emerging as a functioning Constitutional Democracy, with primacy of laws and constitution that has eluded Pakistan for 61 years of its checkered history.

Three times in the span of two years the lawyers, men and women in their somber black coats defied the illegal edicts of the government and succeeded in forcing the government to back down.

The Current Crisis

The current crisis precipitated when, presumably with the connivance of President Zardari the current Supreme Court (largely considered illegitimate) barred the leader of opposition Mr. Nawaz Sharif and his brother Shabaz from contesting elections and holding offices. President Zardari recklessly dismissed the Shabaz led government of Panjab, the most populous province.

This brought out the lawyers back on the streets for the third time with planned marches to the capital, Islamabad, demanding that Mr. Zardari keep the promise he made during the elections of February 2008 to restore the Supreme Court justices fired by the former President Musharraf. The leader of the opposition Mr. Nawaz Sharif joined in the protest.

The Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) of President Zardari, in the face of massive civil demonstrations averted its breakup when President Zardari yielded to the pressure from the senior leaders of the PPP led by Prime Minister Gilani, the United States and the Pakistani military. Prime Minister Gilani diffused the crisis by announcing that the Supreme Court Judges and the former Chief Justice Iftekhar Chaudhry will resume offices following the resignation of the current justices (considered illegal) on the 21st of March. It led to widespread nation wide jubilation.

This was not a win for Mr. Sharif, though he is the beneficiary of it. Large sections of the population consider Mr. Zardari and Mr. Sharif as corrupt and there have been legal verdicts against them. It is the victory of a movement led by lawyers demanding respect for the constitution and the rule of law.

The First And Second Civil Disobedience Movement Of Lawyers

The first time the lawyers led the movement for the rule of law was in March 2007, when on spurious charges President, General Musharraf suspended Chief Justice Chaudhry for taking up the petition on behalf of hundreds of people missing, allegedly at secret detention centers accused of terrorism. Eventually he was exonerated and General Musharraf backed down.

The movement sprang up the second time in November 2007, when only days before the Supreme Court of Pakistan was to give its verdict on a petition challenging the constitutionality of President, General Musharraf’s re-election in October 2007, because he held on to the post of the Chief of Staff of the Army simultaneously. President Musharraf suspended the constitution, jailed several justices of the Supreme Court, including the Chief Justice Iftekhar Chaudhry and appointed a new slate of judges who ruled in his favor. But under the intense pressure of the civil disobedience led by the legal profession, General Musharraf had to yield and gave up the post of the Army Chief of Staff, appointing General Kayani in his place.

The Elections Of 2008 And Mr. Zardari’s Rise To Power

New Assembly elections were held in February 2008. The two main opposition parties, the PPP led by former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto and the faction of Pakistan Muslim League (PLM) led by the former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif had one thing in common, the promise to reinstate the fired Chief Justice and other judges.

PPP leader Benazir Bhutto fell to an assassin’s bullet at an election rally on the 27th of December 2007. Her husband, Asif Ali Zardari, a reviled figure in Pakistan, stepped into the vacuum; and partly with the sympathy vote for popular Benazir Bhutto the PPP won the largest share of seats followed by PLM. Since no party won an outright majority, the two largest parties the PPP and the PLM formed a coalition government.

The coalition broke up when Mr. Zardari reneged on his promise to reinstate the ousted judges by President Musharraf. In August 2008, President Musharraf resigned under a threat of impeachment, and in September Mr. Zardari was elected the President of Pakistan. Since then Mr. Zardari has reneged on all the inconvenient promises and has tried to accrue power.

Pakistan has floundered rudderless in the crosscurrents of internal power struggle between the corrupt civilian governments and endemic coups by the military dictators; and external pressure from the United States to serve its foreign policy aims through the Pakistani military for the last fifty years. The result has been complete decimation of the Pakistani judiciary. The Supreme Court has become the handmaiden of whoever holds the reins of power. Chief Justices have been appointed and fired at the whims of the government in power many times.

The New Opportunity For Pakistan

Fortunately for Pakistan Mr. Zardari was thwarted by the third civil disobedience by the lawyers. The power equation has also changed. Unlike the past, the forces that traditionally supported those in power in Pakistan had to take other realities into consideration.

The American government is the main economic backer of Pakistan, but under President Obama, it realizes that the war on terrorism cannot be won by propping up corrupt oppressive regimes. President Obama conveyed his strong disapproval of Mr. Zardari’s grab for power. The army, the most important instrument of power in Pakistan has had enough under President, General Musharraf. The new Chief of Staff General Kayani told Mr. Zardari in no uncertain term that the army would not intervene to support him. The top leadership of the PPP including the Prime Minister Mr. Gilani, weary of Mr. Zardari’s leadership, let him know that they were not behind him. And finally the police that were supposed to stop the marchers refused to use force on the silent peaceful marchers, except at some places in Karachi the strong hold of the PPP.

The change in circumstances will exert an enormous pressure on all concerned. The reinstated Chief Justice Chaudhry will feel the weight of responsibility to make the Supreme Court a true guardian of the constitution. The army has had enough for the time being and will try to influence the government, but not as heavy handedly, and the politicians have learnt at least for the immediate future that they cannot take people to be supine as before. The lawyers movement has shown no ulterior motive to form a competing center of power, it has disbanded after every success to pursue their private lives. Yet it has rejuvenated in the times of need.

The maturing of Pakistan as a Constitutional Democracy; I hope a liberal democracy, with safeguards for religious, ethnic, linguistic and other minorities, will strengthen the authority of the elected government and will obviously be good for Pakistan. It will also be beneficial to countries with interest in Pakistan. Though it will take time, but after eight years of floundering in Afghanistan the new Obama administration realizes that US efforts in combating the terrorism will succeed only if Pakistan is not a failed state. A constitutional democracy in Pakistan will also be better for India because the relations will not depend on the whims of individuals. It will lead to better cooperation and enhance the possibility of reconciliation between two democratically elected constitutional governments.

Photo: Pakistan Navy

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