FROM high drama to low farce, on and on rumbles the saga of the Swiss
letter. Sept 18 is the new deadline, a day that will mark the fifth time
a prime minister will appear before the Supreme Court this year. And
yet, there is no sign of the letter being written, nor of the court
surrendering to the logic of elections and the democratic project. The
extraordinary has become the new normal and it has reached the point
where even the media and the public cannot really muster much interest.
For what is left to be said at this stage? Rewind to former prime
minister Gilani`s first appearance before the Supreme Court earlier this
year and contrast it with the reaction to Prime Minister Ashraf`s date
with the court yesterday the three-ring circus of spectacular
proportions has degenerated into an almost pitiful sideshow. Perhaps in
this clash of institutions and rhetoric, the present impasse is the
least bad of outcomes: the two sides have not budged from their original
positions but then neither side has launched a truly destabilising
attack on the other.
As luck would have it, another fundamental
part of the equation has moved, however: as days and weeks and months
have been slowly swal-lowed up by the cut and thrust between the court
and the PPP, the deadline for a general election has come closer and
closer.
Whereas in January, when the courttook up theissue of the
NRO with gusto again, it was a question of how the government could
survive 15 months of this tussle, now it is down to a question of a few
short months. If, as rumour has it, the government is contemplating a
spring election, the country is on the cusp of a pre-election interim
set-up. In that may lie the way out for everyone.
Prime Minister
Ashraf will almost certainly have to go now that the court has set in
motion a repeat of the Gilani affair. But Sept 18 is now the earliest
date at which the prime minister can be charged for contempt and, if the
court`s recent mood is anything to go by, he will have at least several
more weeks before a final order for his disqualification is signed.
That would take the country into an interim set-up timeline, so if the
court were to oust Mr Ashraf at that point, the government could call an
election and be done with this numbing ebb and flow of its tussle with
the court.
However, already the next question looms: what will
the interim prime minister do about the small matter of a letter to
Switzerland?
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