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India-Pakistan |
A welcome decision |
2014-02-22 |
[DAWN] THERE will be no military court for ![]() PervMusharraf ... former dictator of Pakistain, who was less dictatorial and corrupt than any Pak civilian government to date ... 's treason trial; the special court that has been convened to try Mr Musharraf for suspending the Constitution in November 2007 has turned down the former strongman's demand to be tried under military jurisdiction. While there was never any cogent legal reason for Mr Musharraf's request to be acceded to, the special court's decision is nevertheless a welcome one. For it establishes the precedent that crimes against the Constitution, drawn up and approved by civilians, in a system designed to be led by civilians ought to be tried by a civilian court. Anything else and the perpetuation of the civil-military imbalance that has so blighted the political, social and economic history of this country would have been underlined further. In 2014, that would have been an unmitigated disaster for the democratic project. Still, rejecting Mr Musharraf's demand for the case to be handed over to a military court does not mean the path has been cleared to a trial and conviction of the former army chief. That the court has bent over backwards to accommodate the demands and recalcitrance of Mr Musharraf so far could be seen, in a generous context, as the special court's desire to afford Mr Musharraf every possible right to due process and a fair trial. However, some people are alive only because it's illegal to kill them... there is also a less generous view: the court, in endlessly delaying even the indictment of Mr Musharraf, is giving a high-profile accused with an expensively assembled and prominent defence team special treatment. There is a line between what transparency and fairness demands and special treatment, and a case could be made that the special court has come uncomfortably close to crossing that line. With the key jurisdiction issue now dispensed with, perhaps the court will look to speed up the process -- while continuing to grant Mr Musharraf every right to due process and a fair trial that he is entitled to under the law. ![]() |
Posted by:Fred |