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A-
British
Rule and Muslim League
The
British ruled the Indian subcontinent for nearly 200 years—from
1756 to 1947. After the Indian Mutiny of 1857, the British
government abolished the powers of the British East India
Company, which had ruled the sub-continent on behalf of the
British Crown, and took on direct powers of governance.
Political reforms were initiated, allowing the formation of
political parties. The Indian National Congress, representing
the overwhelming majority of Hindus, was created in 1885. The
Muslim League was formed in 1906 to represent and protect the
position of the Muslim minority. When the British introduced
constitutional reforms in 1909, the Muslims demanded and
acquired separate electoral rolls. This guaranteed Muslims
representation in the provincial as well as national
legislatures until the dawn of independence in 1947.
The idea of a separate Muslim state in south Asia was raised in
1930 by the poet and philosopher Sir Muhammad Iqbal. He
suggested that the north-western provinces of British India and
the native state of Jammu and Kashmir should be joined into such
a state. The name "Pakistan", which came to be used to describe
this grouping, is thought to have originated as a compound
abbreviation made up of letters of the names of the provinces
involved, as follows: Punjab, Afghania (North West
Frontier Province), Kashmir, Indus-Sind, and
Baluchistan. An alternative explanation says the name
means "Land of the Pure".
By
the end of the 1930s, Muhammad Ali Jinnah, leader of the Muslim
League and considered the founding father of Pakistan, had also
decided that the only way to preserve Indian Muslims from Hindu
domination was to establish a separate Muslim state.
B-
Creation of
Pakistan
In 1940 the
Muslim League formally endorsed the partitioning of British
India and the creation of Pakistan as a separate Muslim state.
During pre-independence talks in 1946, therefore, the British
government found that the stand of the Muslim League on
separation and that of the Congress on the territorial unity of
India were irreconcilable. The British then decided on partition
and on August 15, 1947, transferred power dividedly to India and
Pakistan. The latter, however, came into existence in two parts:
West Pakistan, as Pakistan stands today, and East Pakistan, now
known as Bangladesh. The two were separated by 1,600 km (1,000
mi) of Indian territory.
C-
Problems of
Partition The
division of the subcontinent caused tremendous dislocations of
populations. Some 6 million Hindus and Sikhs moved from Pakistan
into India, and about 8 million Muslims migrated from India to
Pakistan. The demographic shift was accompanied by considerable
inter-ethnic violence, including massacres, that reinforced
bitterness between the two countries. This bitterness was
further intensified by disputes over the accession of the former
native states of India to either country. Nearly all of these
562 widely scattered polities had joined either India or
Pakistan; the princes of Hyderabad, Junagadh, and Kashmir,
however, had chosen to join neither country.
On
August 15, 1947, these three states became technically
independent, but when the Muslim ruler of Junagadh, with its
predominantly Hindu population, joined Pakistan a month later,
India annexed his territory. Hyderabad’s Muslim prince, ruling
over a mostly Hindu population, tried to postpone any decision
indefinitely, but in September 1948 India also settled that
issue by pre-emptive annexation. The Hindu ruler of Jammu and
Kashmir, whose subjects were 85 per cent Muslim, decided to join
India. Pakistan, however, questioned his right to do so, and a
war broke out between India and Pakistan. Although the UN
subsequently resolved that a plebiscite be held under UN
auspices to determine the future of Kashmir, India continued to
occupy about two thirds of the state and refused to hold a
plebiscite. This deadlock, which still persists, has intensified
suspicion and antagonism between the two countries.
D-
Pre-Republican Era The
first independent government of Pakistan was headed by Prime
Minister Liaquat Ali Khan. Muhammad Ali Jinnah was
Governor-General until his death in 1948. From 1947 to 1951 the
country functioned under unstable conditions. The government
endeavoured to create a new national capital to replace Karachi,
organize the bureaucracy and the armed forces, resettle
refugees, and contend with provincial politicians who often
defied its authority. Failing to offer any programme of economic
and social reform, however, it did not capture the popular
imagination.
In
his foreign policy Liaquat established friendly relations with
the United States, when he visited President Harry S. Truman in
1950. Liaquat’s United States visit injected bitterness into
Pakistan’s relations with the Union of Soviet Socialist
Republics (USSR) because Liaquat had previously accepted an
invitation from Moscow that never materialized in a visit. The
United States gave no substantial aid to Pakistan until three
years later, but the USSR, Pakistan’s close neighbour, had been
alienated.
After Liaquat was assassinated in 1951, Khwaja Nazimuddin, an
East Pakistani who had been Governor-General since Jinnah’s
death, became Prime Minister. Unable to prevent the erosion of
the Muslim League’s popularity in East Pakistan, however, he was
forced to yield to another East Pakistani, Muhammad Ali Bogra,
in 1953. When the Muslim League was routed in East Pakistani
elections in 1954, the Governor-General dissolved the
constituent assembly as no longer representative. The new
assembly that met in 1955 was no longer dominated by the Muslim
League. Muhammad Ali Bogra was then replaced by Chaudhuri
Muhammad Ali, a West Pakistani. At the same time, Iskander Mirza
became the Governor-General of the country.
The new constituent assembly enacted a bill, which became
effective in October 1955, integrating the four West Pakistani
provinces into one political and administrative unit. The
assembly also produced a new constitution, which was adopted on
March 2, 1956. It declared Pakistan an Islamic republic. Mirza
was elected Provisional President.
E-
Cabinet
Shifts The
new constitution notwithstanding, political instability
continued because no stable majority party emerged in the
National Assembly. Prime Minister Ali remained in office only
until September 1956, when he was succeeded by Huseyn Shaheed
Suhrawardy, leader of the Awami League of East Pakistan. His
tenure lasted for slightly more than a year. When President
Mirza discovered that Suhrawardy was planning an alliance
between East and West Pakistani political forces by supporting
the presidential aspirations of Firoz Khan Noon, leader of the
Republican Party, he forced the prime minister to resign.
The succeeding coalition government, headed by Ismail Ibrahim
Chundrigar, lasted only two months before it was replaced by a
Republican Party Cabinet under Noon. President Mirza, however,
found that his influence among the Republicans was diminishing
and that the new prime minister had come to an understanding
with Suhrawardy. Against such a coalition Mirza had no chance of
being re-elected president. He proclaimed martial law on October
7, 1958, dismissed Noon’s government, and dissolved the national
assembly.
The president was supported by General Muhammad Ayub Khan,
Commander-in-Chief of the armed forces, who was named chief
martial-law administrator. Twenty days later Ayub forced the
president to resign and assumed the presidency himself.
F-
Ayub Years
Ayub
ruled Pakistan almost absolutely for more than ten years, and
his regime made some notable achievements, although it did not
eliminate the basic problems of Pakistani society. A land
reforms commission appointed by Ayub distributed some 900,000
hectares (2.2 million acres) of land among 150,000 tenants. The
reforms, however, did not erase feudal relationships in the
countryside; about 6,000 landlords still retained an area three
times larger than that given to the 150,000 tenants. During
Ayub’s regime developmental funds to East Pakistan increased
more than threefold. This had a noticeable effect on the economy
of the eastern part, but the disparity between the two sectors
of Pakistan was not eliminated.
Perhaps the most pervasive of Ayub’s changes was his system of
Basic Democracies. It created 80,000 basic democrats, or union
councillors, who were leaders of rural or urban areas around the
country. They constituted the electoral college for presidential
elections and for elections to the national and provincial
legislatures created under the constitution promulgated by Ayub
in 1962. The Basic Democratic System had four tiers of
government from the national to the local level. Each tier was
assigned certain responsibilities in administering the rural and
urban areas, such as maintenance of primary schools, public
roads, and bridges.
Ayub also promulgated an Islamic marriage and family laws
ordinance in 1961, imposing restrictions on polygamy and
divorce, and reinforcing the inheritance rights of women and
minors.
For a long time Ayub maintained cordial relations with the
United States, stimulating substantial economic and military aid
to Pakistan. This relationship, however, deteriorated in 1965,
when another war with India over Kashmir broke out. The United
States then suspended military and economic aid to both
countries, thus denying Pakistan badly needed weapons. The USSR
then intervened to mediate the conflict, inviting Ayub and Prime
Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri of India to Toshkent. By the terms
of the so-called Tashkent Agreement of January 1966, the two
countries withdrew their forces to pre-war positions and
restored diplomatic, economic, and trade relations. Exchange
programmes were initiated, and the flow of capital goods to
Pakistan increased greatly.
The Tashkent Agreement and the Kashmir war, however, generated
frustration among the people of Pakistan and resentment against
President Ayub. Foreign Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto resigned
his position and agitated against Ayub’s dictatorship and the
"loss" of Kashmir. In March 1969 Ayub resigned. Instead of
transferring power to the speaker of the National Assembly, as
the constitution dictated, he handed it over to the
commander-in-chief of the army, General Agha Muhammad Yahya
Khan. Yahya became President and declared martial law.
G-
Civil War
In
an attempt to make his regime more acceptable, Yahya dismissed
almost 300 senior civil servants and identified 30 families that
were said to control about half of Pakistan’s gross national
product. To curb their power Yahya in 1970 issued an ordinance
against monopolies and restrictive trade practices. He also made
commitments to transfer power to civilian authorities, but in
the process of making this shift, his intended reforms broke
down.
The greatest challenge to Pakistan’s unity, however, was
presented by East Pakistan, led by Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, leader
of the Awami League, who insisted on a federation under which
East Pakistan would be virtually independent. He envisaged a
federal government that would deal with defence and foreign
affairs only; even the currencies would be different, although
freely convertible. His programme had great emotional appeal for
East Pakistanis. In the election of December 1970 called by
Yahya, Sheikh Mujib—as Mujibur Rahman was generally called—won
by a landslide in East Pakistan, capturing a clear majority in
the National Assembly. The Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) formed
by Bhutto in 1967 emerged as the largest party in West Pakistan.
Suspecting Sheikh Mujib of secessionist politics, Yahya in March
1971 postponed indefinitely the convening of the National
Assembly. Mujib in return accused Yahya of collusion with Bhutto
and established a virtually independent government in East
Pakistan. Yahya opened negotiations with Mujib in Dhaka in
mid-March, but the effort soon failed. Mujib was arrested and
brought to West Pakistan to be tried for treason. Meanwhile
Pakistan’s army went into action against Mujib’s civilian
followers, who demanded freedom and independence for East
Pakistan, or Bangladesh ("Bengali Nation") as it was to be
called.
There were a great many casualties during the ensuing military
operations in East Pakistan, during which the Pakistani army
attacked the poorly armed population. India claimed that nearly
10 million Bengali refugees crossed its borders, and stories of
West Pakistani atrocities abounded. The Awami League leaders
took refuge in Calcutta and established a government-in-exile.
India finally intervened on December 3, 1971, and the Pakistani
army surrendered 13 days later. On December 20 Yahya
relinquished power to Bhutto, and in January 1972 the
independent state of Bangladesh came into existence. When the
Commonwealth of Nations admitted Bangladesh later that year,
Pakistan withdrew from membership, not to return until 1989.
However, the Bhutto government gave diplomatic recognition to
Bangladesh in 1974.
H-
Bhutto
Government
Under
Bhutto’s leadership a diminished Pakistan began to rearrange its
national life. Bhutto nationalized basic industries, insurance
companies, domestically owned banks, and schools and colleges.
He also instituted modest land reforms that benefited tenants
and middle-class farmers. He removed the armed forces from the
process of decision-making, but to placate the generals he
allocated about 6 per cent of the gross national product to
defence. In 1973 the National Assembly adopted the country’s
fifth constitution. Bhutto became Prime Minister, and Fazal
Elahi Chaudhry replaced him as President.
Although discontented, the military remained silent for some
time. Bhutto’s nationalization programme and land reforms
further earned him the enmity of the entrepreneurial and
capitalist class, while religious leaders saw in his socialism
an enemy of Islam. His decisive flaw, however, was his inability
to deal constructively with the opposition. His rule grew
heavy-handed. In general elections in March 1977 nine opposition
parties united in the Pakistan National Alliance (PNA) to run
against Bhutto’s PPP. Losing in three of the four provinces, the
PNA alleged that Bhutto had rigged the vote. It boycotted the
provincial elections a few days later and organized
demonstrations throughout the country that lasted for six weeks.
I-
Zia Regime
When
the situation seemed to be deadlocked, the army Chief of Staff,
General Muhammad Zia Ul-Haq, staged a coup on July 5, 1977, and
imposed another military regime. Bhutto was tried for political
murder and found guilty; he was hanged on April 4, 1979.
Zia formally assumed the presidency in 1978 and established
Shari’ah (Islamic law) as the law of the land. The constitution
of 1973 was initially amended, then suspended in 1979, and
benches were constituted at the courts to exercise Islamic
judicial review. Interest-free banking was initiated, and
maximum penalties were provided for adultery, defamation, theft,
and the consumption of alcohol.
On
March 24, 1981, Zia issued a provisional constitutional order,
operative until the lifting of martial law. It envisaged the
appointment of two vice-presidents and allowed political parties
that had been approved by the election commission before
September 30, 1979, to function. All other parties, including
the PPP, now led by Bhutto’s widow and by his daughter, Benazir,
were dissolved.
Pakistan was greatly affected by the Soviet intervention in
Afghanistan in December 1979; by 1984 some 3 million Afghan
refugees were living along Pakistan’s border with Afghanistan,
supported by the government and by international relief
agencies. In September 1981 Zia accepted a six-year economic and
military aid package (worth US$3.2 billion) from the United
States. After a referendum in December 1984 endorsed Zia’s
Islamic-law policies and the extension of his presidency until
1990, Zia permitted elections for parliament in February 1985. A
civilian Cabinet took office in April, and martial law ended in
December. Zia, however, was dissatisfied and, in May 1988, he
dissolved the government and ordered new elections. Three months
later he was killed in an aeroplane crash, and a caretaker
military regime took power.
J-
Benazir
Bhutto
A civil
servant, Ghulam Ishaq Khan, was appointed President, and Benazir
Bhutto became Prime Minister after the PPP won the general
elections held in November 1988. She was the first female
political leader of a modern Islamic state. In August 1990
President Ishaq Khan dismissed her government, charging
misconduct, and declared a state of emergency. Bhutto and the
PPP lost the October elections after she was arrested for
corruption and abuse of power. The new prime minister, Nawaz
Sharif, head of the Islamic Democratic Alliance, continued the
programme of privatizing state enterprises and encouraging
foreign investment begun in the 1980s. He also promised to bring
the country back to Islamic law and to ease continuing tensions
with India over Kashmir. The charges against Bhutto were
resolved, and she returned to lead the PPP.
In
April 1993 Ishaq Khan once again used his presidential power,
this time to dismiss Sharif and to dissolve parliament. However,
Sharif appealed to the Constitutional Court of Pakistan, which
stated that Kahn’s actions were unconstitutional and reinstated
Sharif as Prime Minister. Sharif and Kahn subsequently became
embroiled in a power struggle that paralysed the Pakistani
government. In an agreement designed to end the stalemate,
Sharif and Kahn resigned together in July 1993, and elections
were held in October of that year. The PPP won and Bhutto was
again named Prime Minister. Farooq Ahmad Khan Leghari became the
new president in November 1993.
K-
Nuclear
Proliferation With
Bhutto in office, relations between India and Pakistan became
more tense. Bhutto openly supported the Muslim rebels in
Indian-held Jammu and Kashmir, who were involved in sporadic
fighting against the Indian army. She also announced that
Pakistan would continue with its nuclear weapons development
programme, raising concerns that a nuclear arms race could start
between Pakistan and India, which is believed to have had
nuclear weapons since the 1970s. In February 1992, when the
Pakistani government admitted to having nuclear capability, it
claimed that its nuclear weapons programme had been stopped at
the level achieved in 1989—that is, with an actual nuclear
device far from completion. In 1996 the United States returned
to a policy of delaying delivery of military equipment to
Pakistan owing to China having supplied nuclear-weapons-related
materials in 1995. Relations between Pakistan and India
deteriorated in early 1996, when each country accused the other
of conducting nuclear tests, though the first officially
confirmed tests did not take place for another two years.
L-
Islamic
Activism Pakistan
has generally been considered a moderate Islamic state; Islamic
fundamentalists won only nine National Assembly seats in the
1993 elections; however, during the 1990s Islamic activists
seemed to be gaining in influence. There were persistent reports
of discrimination against religious minorities. The incidents
increased after 1991 when the National Assembly ruled that the
criminal code should conform to Islamic law and the death
sentence was made mandatory for a blasphemy conviction.
In
February 1995 the position of religious minorities was
highlighted by the conviction and sentencing to death of two
Christians, one aged 14, for the alleged writing of blasphemous
remarks on a mosque wall in a village in Punjab province. The
imposition of the death sentence on a child and questions
surrounding the evidence provoked an outcry within Pakistan, as
well as abroad. The High Court at the end of the month
overturned the conviction, saying there was no evidence to
sustain it; earlier the original complainant, an imam (Muslim
prayer leader) in the village, had withdrawn his charges. The
government, which had supported the changes in the law, appeared
caught in a dilemma. Benazir Bhutto described herself as
"shocked" by the sentences but declined to intervene. However,
following the High Court ruling she said there would be a review
of the law.
In
June 1995 violence flared in Karachi over Bhutto’s alleged
condemnation of the ethnically based Mohajor Qaumi Movement,
leaving over 290 people dead; all-party talks with the movement
were convened immediately afterwards, but did not bring the
hoped-for ceasefire in the city. In October a number of army
officers were arrested over an attempted Islamic fundamentalist
coup. Tension with India following a mysterious rocket strike on
a mosque in the Pakistani province of Azad Kashmir, bordering
Indian-controlled Kashmir, escalated into heavy fighting along
the Kashmir ceasefire line in January 1996. In April 1996 the
former Pakistan cricket captain Imran Khan formed an
anti-government political group, the Justice Movement, while
bombings and political violence took place in Lahore and
elsewhere.
M-
Recent
Developments
In November
1996 Bhutto's government was for the second time dismissed by
the president under renewed charges of corruption and misrule.
The National Assembly was dissolved for the third time since
civilian rule replaced military rule. On February 3, 1997,
elections were held to replace the Bhutto government. Former
prime minister Sharif and his PML faction gained a vast
majority, despite a low turnout (around 30 per cent). They won
130 out of 217 seats, with Bhutto's PPP winning only 20 seats.
In late March the government announced the implementation of an
economic revival programme aimed to enhance exports, reduce
prices, and generate employment. In April the National Assembly
unanimously passed a constitutional amendment removing the
president's power to dissolve the assembly. This controversial
ability had been used to dismiss three elected governments since
1985. The rupee was devalued in October by 8.5 per cent; later
that month a three-year financing package from the IMF amounting
to US$1,558 million was announced, followed by a World Bank loan
of US$250 million in December. Following a constitutional
crisis, President Leghari unexpectedly resigned in December.
Sharif's position was further enhanced when his nominee for the
presidential office, Muhammad Rafiq Tarar, was successfully
elected.
In
April 1998 Pakistan openly tested a surface-to-surface missile
with a range of 1,500 km (930 mi). Following five underground
nuclear tests by India in May 1998, Pakistan responded within
days with six nuclear tests. The events further heightened
tensions between the two countries. Shari'ah, or Islamic, Law
was enforced throughout the country in October by an
overwhelming 135-vote majority in Pakistan's National Assembly.
In December the president of India Atal Vajpayee made an
historic bus ride from his capital New Delhi to Lahore. Sharif
met with him and they signed a protocol designed to prevent
nuclear war.
Pakistan
tested two new long-range missiles capable of carrying nuclear
weapons in April 1999—just days after India had carried out
similar tests. That same month a Pakistani court found Benazir
Bhutto and her husband Asif Ali Zardari guilty of corruption and
sentenced them to five years in jail. Both were disqualified
from holding public office and fined a total of $8.6 million.
Islamic insurgents entered Indian-held territory in Kashmir in
May; India retaliated with air-strikes. The conflict ended in
July when Pakistan agreed to secure the withdrawal of the
guerrilla forces (believed to be backed by Pakistani troops).
In October
Sharif was deposed by the military in a bloodless coup, after he
tried to oust the head of the army, General Pervez Musharraf.
Sharif had ordered that an aeroplane returning to Karachi with
Musharraf and 200 other passengers on board be denied landing
permission anywhere in Pakistan, even though the plane was short
of fuel. The military took immediate control and the plane was
allowed to land. Sharif was placed under house arrest and
Musharraf assumed control of the country. and declared him a
Chief Executive of Pakistan. At the Commonwealth Heads of
Government Meeting in November, Pakistan was suspended from the
Commonwealth; the leaders also called for the release of Sharif
and a return to democratic rule. Sharif was formally charged
with kidnapping, hijacking, attempted murder, and terrorism, and
in April 2000 was sentenced to life imprisonment. But on the
request of Sharif Family and Saudi Prince to the Chief Executive
he was exiled from Pakistan. He is now in UAE.
On June 20, 2001, the
military ruler of Pakistan, General Pervez Musharraf, who had
taken the position of chief executive following the coup of
October 1999, took over the role of president from Rafiq Tarar,
and dissolved the already suspended national assembly. The move,
which may have been timed to consolidate General Musharraf’s
power before the summit with India, was widely criticized both
within Pakistan and internationally. It increased doubts about
Musharraf’s declared intention to hold elections by October
2002.
Pakistan became the focus
of worldwide attention and diplomatic efforts by the United
States and Britain over how it should respond to the terrorist
action of September 11, 2001, and the threat of military
retaliation against neighbouring Afghanistan.
Despite internal
opposition from fundamental Islamists, Pakistan joined the broad
coalition of nations condemning the atrocity and supporting
action against those responsible for the attacks as well as
those nations responsible for sheltering the terrorists.
Pakistan’s president, General Pervez Musharraf, condemned the
Taliban government in Afghanistan for protecting the prime
suspect for the attacks, Osama bin Laden and his Al-Qa’edah
network. As one of only three nations previously to recognize
the legitimacy of the Taliban government, Pakistan’s influence
in the region was regarded by the coalition leaders as crucial
in any negotiations with the Taliban and its support
strategically vital in any military action against Afghanistan.
British prime minister Tony Blair visited Pakistan for talks to
cement the relationship. Diplomatic efforts by Pakistan failed
to persuade the Taliban to give up bin Laden, and in the
meantime the deployment of US and British troops and arms to the
region continued. The first air strikes on Afghanistan in
mid-October led to demonstrations against US aggression in
Pakistan, resulting in several deaths. Musharraf denounced the
protests and ordered a clampdown on Taliban sympathizers in
Pakistan. Large-scale protests continued all month, with the
biggest demonstrations taking place in Karachi, where tens of
thousands of protestors gathered to denounce the United States
and to call for the overthrow of Musharraf.
In response to Pakistan’s
support for the military action, which included providing
airfields for US aeroplanes, previously imposed sanctions
against the country were lifted, paving the way for promised
Western aid including a US$300 million loan from the World Bank.
Musharraf also faced a refugee crisis in the country: it is
estimated that over 2.5 million refugees had crossed the border
into Pakistan since the 1979 Russian invasion of Afghanistan.
With the onset of war, the number of displaced persons
attempting to enter the country grew and Pakistan closed its
borders to the flood of refugees, sparking protests from the
United Nations.
The US secretary of state,
Colin Powell, visited the country on October 15 to shore up
support in Pakistan for US military action. He also entered into
discussions over the issue of Kashmir after Pakistan accused
India of moving troops to the ceasefire line to take advantage
of the war in Afghanistan. Tensions had been increasing between
the two countries since a car bomb killed 40 people at the
Jammu-Kashmir state legislature in Srinagar on October 1;
shelling from both sides of the Line of Control continued
throughout the latter part of the month.
In a separate but related
action on October 28, 2001, 18 Pakistani Christians were
murdered during a church service in Bahawalpur by unidentified
gunmen on motorcycles. The action was believed to have been
committed by Islamic extremists in protest against the war in
Afghanistan. |