|
Special
Policing Powers for Pakistan Rangers (Sindh): A Brewing Political or Constitutional
Crisis?
The month of December 2015 saw the PML-N led Federal Government
and the PPP-led Sindh Government at a logjam over granting special policing
powers to Pakistan Rangers (Sindh) for the Karachi Operation. 1
The development presents itself as an interesting
anomaly in the Constitutional landscape of the country. The legal provisions
under play here are Article 142 (Subject Matter of Federal and Provincial Laws),
147 (Powers of Provinces to Entrust Functions on the Federation), and 148 (Obligations
of Provinces and Federation) of the Constitution, along with Section 4 of the
Anti-Terrorism Act of 1997 (Calling in of armed forces and civil armed forces
to prevent terrorism of civil powers), and article 11EEEE (Special Powers of
Detainment and Formation of JIT) of the Anti-Terrorism (Amendment) Act, 2014.
Given all of the above, the following questions
present themselves in light of the recent crisis:
- Is Article 147 of the Constitution2 relevant
when it comes to granting special policing powers to Pakistan Rangers (Sindh)
under the Anti-Terrorism Act of 1997, and as amended in 2014?
- Does the Provincial Government, through a resolution passed
by the Provincial Assembly, have the authority to impose conditions on the
operational modalities of a Federal Agency, and alter the provisions of
a Federal law? (in this case, the Section 4 of the Anti-Terrorism Act of
1997)
- Will the issue manifest itself again when the next deadline
of the expiration of the special policing powers of the Rangers approaches?
In a snapshot, the issue has seen numerous political
vicissitudes during the past month. These came to the fore when the deadline
for special policing powers granted to Rangers expired on December 06, 2015.
The Sindh Government chose to approach the issue in a different manner, unlike
in the past, by referring the matter to the Provincial Assembly of Sindh. This
is the first time the Sindh Government took this stance since the start of the
Karachi Operation in October 2013. Interestingly, Article 147 states that the
concerned matter should be brought to the Provincial Assembly for ratification
within 60 days. However, the Chief Minister gave approval for requisitioning
of the Rangers in the Karachi Division on July 16, 2015, whereas the matter
was brought in front of the Assembly with a delay on December 09, 2015.
The reason for ratification by the Assembly
may be that the Sindh Government has been embarrassed frequently due to the
Rangers’ raids on various Government departments in the province. For
some observers, the matter was also referred to the Assembly to throw a spanner
in the Operation and embarrass the Federal Government in the process, which
has stood steadfast behind the various trajectories of the Karachi Operation.
With allegations of the Rangers ‘acting beyond their authority’,
the Provincial Assembly of Sindh ratified the decision of the Sindh Government
taken on July 16, 2015 to deploy Pakistan Rangers (Sindh). The Resolution however
introduced a caveat, presented as ‘conditions’, with regards to
the operational modalities of the Rangers.3
A summary was moved by the Sindh Government,
extending Rangers’ powers in the province for another 60 days, however
with curtailed powers and the requirement of the Chief Minister’s nod
in particular domains. The Federal Government, however, rejected the summary,
and restored complete policing powers to the Rangers stating that a Resolution
of the Provincial Assembly could not amend a Federal law.
The PPP in return has termed the disregard for
the Resolution adopted by the Provincial Assembly of Sindh by the Federal Government
an invasion of the province’s autonomy, as enshrined under the Constitution.4
The Chairman of the PPP, Mr. Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari, especially fired a broadside
at the Federal Government, saying that although PPP had supported the counter-terrorism
efforts, the‘N-League Action Plan’ had now turned it into
a tool for political victimization.5
The Military leadership also has not refrained
from making public statements on the issue, with the Corp V Commander, Lt. Gen.
Naveed Mukhtar, visiting the Rangers’ Headquarter on December 17, 2015
and stating that ‘the paramilitary force plays the role of ‘backbone’
against terrorists in Karachi’.6
Given that the PPP-led Sindh Government has
made the decision to pursue the matter politically, rather than through legal
channels, it may be construed that its position remains weak with regards to
the issue. However, for the sake of the Karachi Operation, and the recent success
it has achieved, it is hoped that the matter is de-politicized and the Federal
and Provincial Government come to a consensus over it. It has become increasingly
clear that especially in Sindh, criminality has often taken refuge in politics.
Major
Terrorists Attacks on Security Installations: Wither Accountability?
Given that the first anniversary of the Peshawar Tragedy was
observed on December 16, 2015, numerous opinion pieces were published dilating
on a presumably changed security landscape after the incident. However, certain
sections of the Editorial published in Daily Dawn on December 20, 2015,
are worthy of reproduction. It states that:
All too often, when accountability and national
security are mentioned together, there is a tendency in some quarters to deflect
the serious questions. The questions themselves are alleged to be unpatriotic
or anti-institution. Nothing could be further from the truth. Inquiries properly
done-transparently, independently and in a non-partisan manner-can shed light
on everything from policy failures to operational issues. Inquiries make reforms
possible and can help prevent catastrophes from being repeated. Yet, the institutional
aversion to accountability and transparency appears to dominate the true national
interest here… A year on from the APS attack, precious few facts are
publicly known, even though four individuals have already been executed after
convictions in military courts for ties to the attack…. What went wrong?
When failures, lapses and oversights are identified, institutions can be strengthened.
When errors are covered up, future catastrophes become more likely.
The debate that took place in the Senate of
Pakistan on the anniversary of the Peshawar Tragedy echoed similar sentiments.
Members from across the aisle called for constituting an independent judicial
commission to affix responsibility for security and intelligence failure, which
had led to the attack on the school. The Senators also called for exposing the
people responsible for other major disasters like the 1971 East Pakistan tragedy,
the 1999 Kargil debacle and killing of Al Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden in Abbottabad
Since October 2009, at least 11 major attacks
have taken place on major security installations, on which the inquiry report
has never been made public; neither have those who were responsible held accountable
publically. These attacks have included not only the one on the GHQ on October
10, 2009, but also on the PNS Mehran Base and the PAF’s Minhas Base at
Kamra. This opacity permeates to such an extent that the Abbottabad Commission
Report was leaked by Al-Jazeera and still has not been made public by the Government
of Pakistan. Similarly, with regards to the Peshawar Tragedy of December 16,
2014, it has only been reported that 4 terrorists involved in the attack have
been sentenced to death by the Military Courts, as informed by the ISPR. However,
the security lapses that occurred have not been highlighted and neither has
any accountability, apparently, been held in this regard.
Talking
AT Each Other: Public Statements about Implementation of the National
Action Plan
November 2015 saw a spate of competing public statements emanating
from both the civil and military leadership regarding implementation of the
National Action Plan (NAP).7 This highlighted that that there is
hardly any fact-based discourse on the implementation of the NAP, primarily
because there is no defined institutional mechanism to monitor its implementation.
There is no question that a public statement
by the ISPR commenting on the governance by the elected government is not the
most desirable way of communication. Such public statements create the impression
that perhaps the official channels of communication in our national security
management are non-functional and, more seriously, as if the institutions lack
coordination and unanimity.
A cloak of opacity has also shrouded the deliverables
and the progress achieved on them vis-à-vis the NAP. Only paltry figures,
shared for a total of five times by the Prime Minister Office, constitute public
reports on the implementation of the NAP detailing crackdown against hate speech,
combing operations carried across Pakistan, number of executions, etc.
We also believe that the section of the Press
Release by the Prime Minister’s Office, that related to implementation
of the NAP being a “shared responsibility” is ill-advised The onus
of taking leadership in the fight against terrorism, in all its manifestations,
is primarily the responsibility of the elected Government. Although the Prime
Minister has chaired 15 meetings on the implementation of the NAP, there is
no progress reported on the work carried out by the Committee8 formed
and chaired by the Prime Minister on December 26, 2014 to ‘to
ensure expeditious and effective implementation of the National Action Plan’.9
Although Apex Committees were formed both at
the Federal and Provincial level to monitor progress, they hardly serve as a
replacement for constitutionally mandated institutions such as the Cabinet,
the Parliament and the Parliamentary Committees. Although the Prime Minister
and the COAS have met at least 73 times in the past 28 months, there appears
to be a preference for informal, unstructured and un-institutionalized interaction,
without any reliable mechanism for follow-up on decisions. No meeting of the
National Security Committee (NSC), ‘the principal decision-making
body on national security’, has been convened to discuss implementation
of the NAP, with the last meeting held on October 10, 2014.
The Parliament as well has shied away from playing
an effective role in this regard. Although the Senate’s Committee on Defence
has convened two meetings on Operation Zarb-e-Azb, not a single meeting has
been convened on the National Action Plan (NAP). Similarly, the NA’s Standing
Committee has also not convened a meeting on the NAP. Both the Standing Committee
on Interior of the National Assembly and Pakistan Senate have also not convened
a meeting on the National Action Plan. We believe that the two should develop
a Plan of Action to critically engage in regular oversight of implementation
status of the National Action Plan, Operation Zarb-e-Azb and the National Security
Committee (NSC), which has not met for a year now, and, as was its mandate,
not come up with a National Security Policy.
Increasing
International Profile: Diplomatic Efforts by the COAS
An increasing international profile of the COAS, and persistent
diplomatic efforts by the Military leadership to secure support for our fight
against terrorism, have become a permanent feature of Pakistan’s foreign
policy. However, these endeavors may be anomalous for civil-military protocols
considering the COAS’ regular interaction with the heads of various states
and foreign political leadership, in the absence of either the Federal Minister
of Defence, or the Advisor to the Prime Minister on Foreign Affairs. COAS’
visited Turkey in October 2015, which saw him interacting with the Turkish President,
Prime Minister, Foreign Minister and Defence Minister.
The COAS not only took a trip to the Kingdom
of Saudi Arabia, where he called upon Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques,Salman
bin Abdul Aziz al Saud on November 04, 2015, but also to Brazil where he called
upon the Defence Minister of Brazil on November 25, 2015 along with being awarded
the Order of Merit by the Brazilian Government.
The COAS also undertook a trip to the United
States from November 15-21, 2015..10 He not only held interactions
on the Capitol Hill, but also called upon the Secretary of State, United States
of America, Mr. John Kerry on November 18, 2015, and the American Vice President,
Mr. Joe Biden on November 19, 2015.
The ‘Readout’ issued by the White
House for the meeting between Mr. Joe Biden and the COAS stated that ‘the
meeting, which followed the Vice President’s October 22 breakfast in Washington
with Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, addressed ongoing efforts to strengthen U.S.-Pakistan
relations’.11
COAS Gen. Raheel Sharif calling upon the Vice President of
the United States of America, Mr. Joe Biden at the White House of November 19,
201512
The COAS’ foreign engagements for the
period under consideration ended with his visit to Kabul on December 27, 2015
where he met not only with the President of Afghanistan, Mr. Ashraf Ghani, but
also the Chief Executive Officer, Dr. Abdullah Abdullah.
The COAS calling upon the President of Afghanistan, Mr. Ashraf
Ghani on December 27, 2015
MQM’s
Protest Rally: Centrality of Pakistan Rangers (Sindh) in Karachi’s Law
Enforcement
An image from the protest rally taken out by MQM in Karachi
on November 26, 2015
Following the formation of the Grievance Redressal
Committee (GRC) on October 16, 2015, it was hoped that the official channels
of communication for the grievances of the MQM had been established. However,
the protest rally organized by the MQM on November 26, 2015 showed that this
was far from the case.
The rally, led by Dr. Farooq Sattar, MNA, was
to protest the raids by Pakistan Rangers (Sindh) on the party’s
offices and also the arrest of party workers in the build-up to the Local Government
election in Karachi on December 05, 2015. According to Dr. Farooq Sattar, as
of November 23, 2015, more than 77 workers of the MQM have been arrested by
the Pakistan Rangers (Sindh), who were campaigning for the Local Government
elections. He went on to state that ‘it seems that planning is underway
to snatch the [home] ground from MQM’.13
The protest march was headed towards the Headquarters
of the Pakistan Rangers (Sindh) when it was finally intercepted at Numaish Chowarangi.
Subsequently, FIRs were also registered against 9 leaders of the MQM, including
Dr. Farooq Sattar for allegedly setting up roadblocks and harassing citizens.14
All these developments signify the central position
that the Pakistan Rangers (Sindh) have attained with regards to the Karachi
Operation and the law enforcement dynamics of Sindh. What further highlights
the latter is the fact that on November 05, 2015 delegations of MQM and JI separately
called on the Director General of Pakistan Rangers (Sindh), Maj. Gen. Bilal
Akbar. According to the Press Release issued:
In the meetings, which were separately held,
the participants exchanged views about the matters related to the Karachi operation
and security arrangements for the upcoming local government elections. The participants
also agreed to strengthen peace in Karachi with mutual coordination and focus
and carry the operation forward in a better way.15
It has been seen on numerous occasions that
successive Provincial Governments have made decisions to further empower the
Pakistan Rangers (Sindh), rather than affecting any systematic reform in the
Police. Experts believe that politically motivated postings and transfers by
the Provincial Government have decapitated the Police force. The result has
been years of neglect of the law and order situation in Karachi, with the Pakistan
Rangers (Sindh) being called in to clean up the mess. Although they might have
been able to clear the mess in the past, due to a weakened Police Force, the
progress cannot be sustained, making the presence of Pakistan Rangers (Sindh)
a permanent and central force in Karachi’s law enforcement dynamics.
No
Meeting of the National Security Committee
In an interview given by the Federal Minister of Defence, Khawaja
Muhammad Asif, MNA to the BBC Urdu on December 17, 2015, the Minister stated
that the National Security Committee and the Apex Committees were essentially
the same, with the difference of only the name.
It is extremely regretful that such a statement
should emanate from the Defence Minister considering vast range of differences
between the two bodies. The National Security Committee is the ‘the
principal decision-making body on national security’, whose Terms
of Reference and Membership have been defined through a notification of the
Federal Government. A National Security Division, located in the Prime Minister’s
Office, assists it. The Apex Committees were formed through a Press Release
issued by the ISPR in January 2015, with its Membership, Terms of Reference
not speicified.
Although the present PML-N led Government should
be credited with the first serious attempt to create a National Security Committee
in 2013, duly supported by a secretariat in the shape of a National Security
Division, it must regretfully be acknowledged that the forum lies almost entirely
dormant. The latest meeting of the NSC was held more than a year ago on October
10, 2014.
PILDAT believes that there is an urgent need
to introduce a regular periodicity of meetings of the NSC,’. Consider
the example of the National Security Councils of the United States of America
and the United Kingdom, which meet almost every week.
Apart from this, PILDAT also believes that there
is a need to review the permanent membership of the Services Chiefs in the NSC,
along with its decision-making role in comparison to a consultative one. This
is the case with all modern states with functional democracies and significant
security challenges including India, Israel United States of America and the
United Kingdom. The National Security Councils in all four countries act in
an advisory capacity for the Premier and the Cabinet, and do not comprise of
the Services Chiefs.
Premier-COAS
Interactions
During the months of November and December 2015, the Prime Minister
and the COAS met thrice.
- The first meeting was held on November 09, 2015 at the
Prime Minister Office.16 During the meeting ‘issues
of national security were discussed’ and ‘different
stages of National Action Plan were reviewed’.17
- The second meeting was held in Karachi on December 07,
2015.18
- The third meeting was held on December 08, 2015 at the
Prime Minister Office.19
The Federal Minister for Defence, Khawaja Muhammad
Asif, MNA was present in two of these meetings.
References:
1. Previously, on August 08, 2015 the Chief Minister of Sindh,
Syed Qaim Ali Shah, MPA, had extended the policing powers for four months,
which expired on December 06, 2015. Similarly, the presence of the Rangers
in the Karachi Division was extended for a year after a meeting of the Sindh
Cabinet on July 18, 2015.
2. Article 147 of the Constitution of Pakistan states that:
Notwithstanding anything contained in the Constitution, the Government
of a Province may, with the consent of the Federal Government, entrust,
either conditionally or unconditionally, to the Federal Government, or to
its officers, functions in relation to any matter to which the executive
authority of the Province extends.
Provided that the Provincial Government shall get the functions so entrusted
ratified by the Provincial Assembly within sixty days
3. These conditions include the following:
- That Pakistan Rangers (Sindh) will have powers in respect of the following
only:
- Target Killing
- Extortion / Bhatta
- Kidnapping for Ransom
- Sectarian Killing
- That any person, who is not directly involved in terrorism and is only
suspected of aiding and abetting terrorists or by way of terror financing
or facilitating terrorists shall not be placed under preventive detention
under any law without prior written approval of the Government of Sindh
i.e. Chief Minister. It is clarified that in case a person is suspected
of the above, cogent reasons with complete evidence justifying such preventive
detention shall be provided to Government of Sindh, which will, based
on the available evidence, approve or reject such proposal of preventive
detention.
- That Pakistan Rangers (Sindh) shall not raid any Office of Government
of Sindh or any other Government Authority without prior written approval
of the Chief Secretary, Government of Sindh.
- That Pakistan Rangers (Sindh) shall not assist any other Institution
/ Organization apart from Sindh Police in carrying out its actions as
stated in Clause 1 above.
- That it is further resolved that the Government of Sindh whilst granting
any powers to Pakistan Rangers (Sindh) and Sindh Police shall take into
account all of the above conditions
The complete text of the Resolution can be accessed at: http://www.pas.gov.pk/index.php/mediacenter/ntf/en/31/1205
4. The Government of Sindh, in a letter written to the Secretary,
Federal Ministry of Interior on December 23, 2015, stated that ‘The
Government of Sindh is of the view that your letter is of complete disregard
of Article 147 of the Constitution and contrary to the Resolution passed
by the Provincial Assembly of Sindh’.
The complete copy of the letter can be accessed at: https://twitter.com/ShehryarRS?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor
7. The matter came to the fore with the Press Release issued
by the ISPR on November 10, 2015, after the meeting of the Corp Commanders.
It stated that the COAS, Gen. Raheel Sharif ‘underlined the need
for matching/ complimentary governance initiatives for long-term gains of
operation and enduring peace across the country. Progress of National Action
Plan’s implementation, finalization of FATA reforms, and concluding
all ongoing JITs at priority, were highlighted as issues, which could undermine
the effects of operations’.
Perhaps it was because of the very same reason that the Prime
Minister’s Office issued what can be termed a rejoinder the very next
day (November 11). The Federal Government chose to underscore ‘decisive
action taken by the Government against extremism and terrorism’
and the ‘successful implementation of this strategy’.
However, at its conclusion, the Press Release underscored an intriguing
caveat, stating that ‘the implementation of the National Action
Plan is a shared responsibility and all institutions have to play their
role, while remaining within the ambit of the Constitution’.
8. The Committee comprises of the Federal Minister for Interior,
Chaudhary Nisar Ali Khan, MNA; Federal Minister of Defence, Khawaja Muhammad
Asif, MNA; Federal Minister for Information and Broadcasting, Senator Pervez
Rashid; Federal Minister for Planning and Development, Mr. Ahsan Iqbal,
MNA; Federal Minister for States and Frontier Regions, Lt. Gen. (Retd.)
Abdul Qadir Baloch, MNA and the Prime Minister’s Advisor on Foreign
Affairs, Mr. Sartaj Aziz.
10. The COAS held interactions not only on the Capitol Hill,
but also called upon the Secretary of State, United States of America, Mr.
John Kerry on November 18, 2015, and the American Vice President, Mr. Joe
Biden on November 19, 2015. The ‘Readout’ issued by the White
House for the meeting between Mr. Joe Biden and the COAS stated that ‘the
meeting, which followed the Vice President’s October 22 breakfast
in Washington with Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, addressed ongoing efforts
to strengthen U.S.-Pakistan relations’.
11. Picture courtesy the Express Tribune
12. For details, please see Killing of Rangers men was aimed
at delaying LG elections: Farooq Sattar, Dawn, November 23, 2015, as accessed
on December 03, 2015 at: http://www.dawn.com/news/1221593
14. For details, please see Rangers chief meets MQM and JI
delegations ahead of the LG polls, Dawn, November 06, 2015, as accessed
on December 04, 2015 at: http://www.dawn.com/news/1217712
15. The meting was also attended by the Federal Minister for
Finance, Senator Muhammad Ishaq Dar, Federal Minister for Interior, Chaudhary
Nisar Ali Khan, MNA, Chief of General Staff, Lt. Gen, Zubair Mahmood Hayat,
National Security Advisor to the Prime Minister, Lt. Gen. (Retd.) Nasser
Khan Janjua, Advisor to the Prime Minister on Foreign Affairs Mr. Sartaj
Aziz, and the Special Assistant to the Prime Minister, Mr. Tariq Fatemi.
The Federal Minister for Defence, Khawaja Muhammad Asif, MNA was conspicuous
by his absence.
|
|