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Globalization
of Media MCM404
VU
Lesson
5
"FROM
NEW HOPES TO SHATTERED DREAMS:
1958-1971"
The
period of about 13 years
from October 1958 to
December 1971 is a curious
combination of extremes.
It
began with the unfortunate
but generally widely welcomed
imposition of martial law to end the
political
instability
of 1957-58, quickly becoming the
era of Presidential rule by Field Marshal
Ayub Khan. It ended
with
the disintegration of the original structure of
Pakistan. To add yet another unique
feature to the nature
of
the Pakistani nation-state (which has
been covered in lecture no.1), the
disintegration of the original
Pakistan
meant that the majority of the
population of Pakistan which
was composed of
Bengali-speaking
citizens
residing in East Pakistan
chose to break away and
create a new State by the
name of "Bangladesh",
thus
leaving the less than 50% of the
population to continue using the
name and the original
concept of
Pakistan!
As
we shall see in lecture nos.6
and 7, it is to the credit of the minority
left behind in West Pakistan
that the
concept
of "Pakistaniat" was evolved
and asserted with such
determination onwards of 1971
that the idea of
Pakistan
and the permanence of the idea of
Pakistan became an established
and acknowledged fact
despite
the
nation-state having reached the extreme of 16
December 1971 when the
majority of Pakistanis
broke
away
from the name of
Pakistan.
Be
that as it may, the focus of
lecture no.5 is the 13 years between
1958 and 1971.
Notwithstanding the
undesirability
of martial law and the abrogation of the
1956 Constitution, in some significant
respects, the
first
part of the tenure of President Ayub
Khan was marked by some
positive social reforms and
fairly rapid
economic
development. Alongside these gains,
actions were also taken to
streamline administration and
governance
and to reduce and punish
corruption.
However,
measures taken to curb freedom of the
Press and methods used to
suppress dissent aggravated
the
relations
between the regime and civil
society, especially in East
Pakistan. Despite the fact that a
military
personality
like Lt. General Azam Khan
was held in high regard by
large numbers of people in East
Pakistan
for
his ability to rapidly
improve public services and
inject urgency and efficiency in public
administration in
East
Pakistan during his tenure as
Governor, the manipulative aspect of the
Basic Democrats
system
increased
rather than decreased the distrust
felt by people about a government led by a
West Pakistani army
leadership.
This
gap of confidence between the people of
East Pakistan and the
central government dominated by
West
Pakistan
was quite visible when the
sister of Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali
Jinnah, Mohtarma Fatima
Jinnah
became
the Opposition candidate for the
Presidential election held in January
1965 because Mohtarma
Fatima
Jinnah received visibly
enthusiastic support in many parts of the
Eastern wing, often as a
symbolic
expression
of the alienation that the Bengali-speaking
part of Pakistan felt about
the lack of a fair
distribution
of
power and resources between
East and West
Pakistan.
About
7 years after President Field Marshal
Ayub Khan seized power, the
direction in which Pakistan
was
headed
became distinctly dangerous.
Even though the limited
armed conflict with India
over the Rann of
Kach
ended with a decision to go
for a peaceful settlement
through arbitration by an international
tribunal,
the
decision to send armed
persons into Indian-occupied Kashmir in
July-August 1965 proved to be a
disastrous
decision because its
possible consequences both
internally and externally had
not been properly
considered.
For example, the assumption
made by Ayub Khan and the
relevant ministers and advisors
such
as
Mr. Z.A. Bhutto and
senior generals to the effect that
India would never retaliate
for the infiltration of
armed
persons into Indian-occupied Kashmir by
attacking Pakistan on the international
frontier between the
two
countries proved to be totally incorrect.
Because India did launch
its attack along the West
Pakistan
border
on 6 September 1965 almost
catching Pakistan
unprepared.
Another
assumption by the top decision-makers to
the effect that the defence of East
Pakistan lay in
defending
West Pakistan also proved to
be politically disastrous because when
war broke out on 6
September
1965,
the people and the leaders of East
Pakistan were shocked to
learn that, even though they
whole-
heartedly
supported the brave resistance and the
successes of the Pakistan armed
forces against India,
the
number
of troops posted in East
Pakistan to defend against any
possible attack by India was
so small as to be
absurd
and meaningless.
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Globalization
of Media MCM404
VU
Thirdly,
the inability of Pakistan to gain
any diplomatic or material
benefit from the Tashkent
Agreement
mediated
between Pakistan and Indian
by the Soviet Union in January 1966
greatly reduced the
popularity
and
support for President Ayub
Khan in West Pakistan and
gave an opportunity to a growing
opposition to
demand
an end to his rule.
Fourthly,
a war that featured memorable
heroism by valiant Pakistanis
did not, in the final
analysis, result in
strengthening
international and national confidence in
the stability and security of the
Pakistani nation-state,
particularly
from the viewpoint of encouraging
foreign investment and promoting
economic growth.
Fifthly,
the negative fall-out of the decision to
send armed persons into
Indian-occupied Kashmir gave an
opportunity
to India to foment conflict
and violence in East Pakistan by adding
the confusion caused by
deliberate
disinformation to the already existing
sense of resentment and disappointment
felt by East
Pakistanis
about West Pakistan.
The
decision by President Ayub Khan's
government to celebrate 10-years of his
tenure through the
observance
of a laud and lavish campaign
titled: "Decade of development" caused a
backlash amongst the
people
in general because this came at a time
when the prices of basic
commodities like sugar had
increased
and
there was wide-spread
dissatisfaction with the failure of
economic growth to ensure
equity and fair
distribution
of income and benefits to the
people.
The
situation became further complicated by
the failure of the government to pursue credibly a
conspiracy
case
against Sheikh Mujeeb-ur-Rehman, the
Awami League leader from
East Pakistan when the case
known
as
the "Agartala Conspiracy Case"
had to be eventually withdrawn.
There
was also high public
resentment against President
Ayub Khan for permitting
his son, the former
Army
Captain
Gohar Ayub Khan to become a
major industrialist through the acquisition Ghandara
Industries.
When
General Yahya Khan took over
as President from an ailing
President Ayub Khan, there
was once again
a
sense of new hopes as had
happened in October 1958.
The new regime promised,
and actually did
manage
to
hold virtually completely free
and fair elections for a
National Assembly and
Provincial Assemblies for
the
first
time in Pakistan's history on the basis
of adult franchise. However,
soon after the polls in December
1970,
there began a series of
actions which quickly led to the
tragedy of March
1971.
Instead
of convening the first session of the
National Assembly as scheduled,
President Yahya Khan
ordered
General
Tikka Khan to take strict
and strong military action
against all those Awami
League leaders and
followers
who were agitating for the convening of
the National Assembly and
demanding the implementation
of
the Six-Points which were the
basis of the Awami League's
manifesto in the December 1970
elections. A
government
which had promised to
transfer power peacefully and
promptly to the winners of the
1970
elections
not only failed to transfer
power, it also took violent
and destructive actions
against the winning
party's
leadership and in so doing,
dramatized and demonstrated the yawning
gulf between the people of
East
Pakistan
and a West Pakistan-dominated
army.
The
crucial period between March
1971 and December 1971
when several opportunities
came to stop the
army
action in East Pakistan and to
avert a catastrophe was
wasted by further misjudgements
and
miscalculations.
For example, President Yahya
Khan wrongly assumed that
President Nixon of the
USA,
being
highly appreciative of Pakistan
for enabling secret contacts
between communist China and the
USA
would
actually sent its armed
forces into the Bay of
Bengal to help "save East
Pakistan" from an Indian
attack.
Even though the American leadership
did have greater sympathy
for Pakistan than it did
for India, no
action
was taken to help Pakistan
on the ground where it
mattered.
On
the international perception level, India
used disinformation and
propaganda to wildly exaggerate
the
consequences
of the actions taken by the Pakistan
army in East Pakistan. India
also created the perception
that
the Hindu citizens of East
Pakistan, comprising about 8 to 10% of the
population, had largely fled
into
Indian
West Bengal to seek refuge
from the brutal, anti-Hindu
actions of the Pakistan army.
The response by
Pakistan
in using mass media to
convey the actual facts and
its overall approach to conducting a
credible
information
campaign was extremely weak
and ineffective. In the court of
world public opinion,
West
Pakistan
was the villain and the
guilty party.
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Globalization
of Media MCM404
VU
Within
West Pakistan itself, in an age in which
there was only the single
government-controlled Radio
Pakistan
and Pakistan Television,
alongside a Press that was
also very West-Pakistan oriented in
its coverage,
there
prevailed a lack of awareness about
how serious and dangerous
the situation was becoming in
East
Pakistan
after March 1971. The
attitude was well-reflected in the
comment made by Mr. Z. A.
Bhutto (the
leader
of the PPP who had refused
to attend the session of the National
Assembly unless there was a
prior
agreement
with the Awami League) on
his return from Dhaka in
March 1971 soon after the
army action had
begun.
He said: "Thank God,
Pakistan is saved". Whereas in
less than 10 months after this comment
was
made,
Pakistan had broken into
two and was far
from "saved".
The
sheer distance of East
Pakistan from West Pakistan,
the suspension by India of overland
flying rights for
Pakistani
aircraft resulting in the very long route having to be
taken via Sri Lanka, the enormous
difficulties of
supplying
troops in East Pakistan with
equipment and support from West
Pakistan, the encirclement of
East
Pakistan
by India on 3 out of 4 sides, the
numerical advantages of India
over Pakistan in all
respects, the loss
of
support by the people of East Pakistan as
a result of the actions taken after
March 1971: all these
factors,
and
more, allowed India to fulfil
its long-held desire to
damage and undo Pakistan. In
November 1971, India
abandoned
any pretence and openly
sent its troops into
East Pakistan, culminating in the
surrender ceremony
of
16 December 1971.
Thus,
the dream and the vision of the
founder of Pakistan and the
tremendous expectations of the people
of
Pakistan
that they would be able to
sustain a unique, two-winged state
structure were finally
shattered. The
prime
responsibility lay within the country
itself, with its leaders and
with its people for allowing
leadership to
take
disastrous and ill-considered
decisions.
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