FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT:
November 10, 2007 Ijaz Syed (408)838-0952
syedi@sbcglobal.net
Khurram Mahmood (408) 230-6784
khurram.mahmoodPTI@gmail.com
MEDIA ADVISORY
“STOP BUSH! STOP MUSHARRAF ”
San Francisco Bay Area community groups protest Martial Law and US support for military dictatorship in Pakistan
Decry announcement of elections under martial law
November 11, San Francisco: On a wet, cold afternoon, over 100 people converged at San Francisco City Hall yesterday to protest the imposition of Martial Law in Pakistan and the US Government’s support for Musharraf’s military dictatorship. People drove from as far as Sacramento to participate in the rally, carrying home-made signs. For two hours, people stood in the rain, raising chants and slogans as they listened to various speakers. The organizers of the rally said that they hoped to build international support for their demands which include an immediate end to the Emergency Rule, withdrawal of U.S. support for the military regime, unconditional release of all political prisoners, restoration of the judiciary, reinstatement of fundamental rights, and an end to the curbs on news media in Pakistan.
Khurram Mahmood, a rally organizer, explained what the Emergency meant to Pakistanis: “If you are living in Pakistan today, you don’t have the right to free assembly, you do not have any right to criticize the government, and if you are found criticizing the government, you can be hauled to prison, and tried in military courts for treason. General Musharraf can now single handedly amend the constitution of Pakistan in order to systemically remove the checks placed on the executive branch.” Mahmood exhorted everyone to support the people’s resistance to martial law in Pakistan.
Ijaz Syed, another rally organizer, elaborated on the scope of people’s resistance in Pakistan: “Since the media has been banned, there is little news coming out of Pakistan of the phenomenal resistance that people have put up to the Martial Law. However, phone calls, blogs, and the internet are being widely used to disseminate information about what is happening on the ground. Human rights activists, lawyers, teachers, students have taken to the streets in unprecedented number. Yesterday, reports from friends came in that all of Sindh had been practically shut down in opposition to the Martial Law.” Syed also demolished the claim that the imposition of martial law was necessary to counter religious extremists in Pakistan. “Just see who is being arrested today—thousands of lawyers and judges and opposition party activists have been thrown into jail, while not a single religious extremist has been arrested since the imposition of Emergency. Instead, some of them have been actually released in the last week as Musharraf has been negotiating with the religious parties to build support for his government. This supposed war on terror is a war on people and democracy.”
Mazda Majidi, from the antiwar group A.N.S.W.E.R., spoke about the U.S. support of dictatorship in Pakistan. He told the group that over $10 billion had been given, mostly as military aid to General Musharraf, over the past five years. “That aid did not go to the Pakistani people, who are an impoverished lot with low literacy and poor access to healthcare. That aid went directly to General Musharraf, to equip him with better weapons, which he has now turned against his own people.” The U.S. State Department has repeatedly declared that Musharraf is an “indispensable ally” of the U.S. and President Bush has reposed confidence in Musharraf’s intentions of bringing democracy to Pakistan.
Roshni Rustomji, a well-known writer and educator from the area, reminded people that the taxes paid by workers in the U.S. must not be used to support injustice or dictatorships anywhere, at any time. She reiterated the main demands of the rally – an end to Emergency and Martial Law in Pakistan, and speedy restoration of the judiciary, constitutional rule and democracy in Pakistan. “I join people who are here today and people around the world who demand that students, lawyers, journalists, human rights activists … citizens … women and men, people from all walks of life—arrested, imprisoned, tortured for opposing General Musharraf’s Martial Law and his suspension of the Constitution of Pakistan must be freed. We can not afford to forget that each and every one of these women and men has a human face and a name.”
James M. Thompson, a senior lawyer, addressed the rally as a close friend of Munir A. Malik, the President of the Supreme Court Bar Association who is currently imprisoned for opposing Emergency. Thompson highlighted the central role played by lawyers in Pakistan in resisting oppression and protecting the independence of the judiciary. He emphasized the importance of Separation of Powers as the model of governance of democratic states. “The doctrine of separation of powers rests upon the recognition that the concentration of absolute power in one man or one body will inevitably lead to exploitation and tyranny,” said Mr. Thompson, quoting Mr. Malik’s speech at the Supreme Court bar association on May 26, 2007, where Malik noted that after usurping power in 1999, General Musharraf has been trying to undermine the judiciary in Pakistan: “The main danger facing Pakistan today is the tendency towards monopolization and concentration of all state power in one body. This lust for unrivalled power and ultimate authority destroys all those institutions that form the foundations of a modern civilized state.”
The speakers were cheered on by rally attendees spontaneously breaking out into loud chants, ranging from disgust at the authoritarian rule in Pakistan and its support from the US, to loud appreciation of the people who are at the forefront of the resistance in Pakistan today. Placards supporting Chief Justice Iftikhar Choudhary, human rights activist Asma Jahangir and lawyers Ali Kurd, Munir Malik and Abrar Hasan were prominent.
Even as the rally ended, news came that Musharraf had announced that elections will be held at the end of January, but has not committed to lifting martial law before the elections are held. Reacting angrily to this announcement, Ijaz Syed said, “Elections under the Emergency Rule are just a meaningless exercise, meant only for international consumption. We unequivocally denounce this attempt to muzzle the democratic movement and will not accept anything short of full restitution of the Constitution NOW.”
The rally today was organized by many groups—among them are Friends of South Asia, a community-based organization in the Bay Area that works towards a multicultural, pluralistic, and a hate-free South Asia; Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf, a broad based pro-democracy movement for change in Pakistan whose mission is to create a free society based on justice and self-respect; and A.N.S.W.E.R. coalition, which has campaigned against U.S. intervention in Latin America, the Caribbean, the Middle East and Asia, and championed civil rights and social and economic justice for working and poor people inside the United States. Other endorsing organizations included Code Pink, South Bay Mobilization, San Jose Peace Center, Alliance of South Asians Taking Action, Peninsula Peace and Justice Center, Pakistani Muslim League and Silicon Valley Pakistani American Council.