Pakistan is "sham democracy": UK, US academics

Press Trust of India  |  London 

is a "sham democracy" and with the ouster of Prime Minster by the Supreme over Panama Papers case it was felt "more keenly" than before, according to eminent and US academics.

The top five academics were participating in a seminar held at University last evening entitled 'The decline of democracy in and the role of the Deep State'.


On July 28, a five-member Supreme bench disqualified 67-year-old Sharif for dishonesty in the Panama Papers case verdict. The apex ruled that corruption cases be filed against him and his children, forcing the embattled leader out of office.

Kicking off the presentations, Farzana Shaikh, a Pakistani-origin associate fellow at Chatham House, described as a "bonsai democracy" or a state restricted by its environment.

"Nowhere has this been more keenly felt in recent times than in the dismissal of by the Pakistani Supreme Court," the forum said in a statement, adding that was a "sham democracy".

Christine Fair, an associate professor at Washington's Georgetown University, stated Sharif was ousted in a judicial coup.

Fair said she did not view the judiciary in as an independent actor but a part of a "new condominium" emerging between the country's Army and the Supreme

"The Army has to develop new tools to keep pruning the grass of democracy to prevent it from taking root in Pakistan," she said.

Professor Lawrence Sez, professor of political economy in Asia at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) in London, said he had initially considered the ousting of Sharif as a positive step, but has now changed his mind because the disqualification has increased unaccountability in

Burzine Waghmar, a senior teaching fellow at SOAS, highlighted the complicity of Pakistan's deep state with the "pick up and dump" routine and suppressing the freedom struggle in the Baluchistan province.

"Democracy does not seem to be the system of choice among the young in and there is a tendency towards a pro- order and/or pro-army view, especially among the more educated youth," said Professor Marie Carine-Lall, chair of education and South Asian studies at University's Institute of Education.

This was based on extensive ground level research carried out by her.

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