The Great Escape
The seizure of power by the military in Pakistan was accompanied by the dissolution of Parliament, the suspension of the Constitution and the incarceration of the ousted prime minister Nawaz Sharif. None of this occasioned any surprise. Sharif's subsequent conviction and jail sentence were also along expected lines. But Sharif's exile last month to Saudi Arabia has introduced a new twist to Pakistani politics. Sharif's release flies in the face of the military regime´s pledge to conduct "fearless, honest and bipartisan accountability" of recent rulers. For Sharif, the price of freedom is 10 years of exile and an undertaking not to take part in Pakistani politics for 21 years. In addition, the government claims it has confiscated
bank deposits worth PNR 300 million (USD 5m), as well as five industrial properties, five residential plots and 24 hectares (60 acres) of agriculture land.
Whatever the circumstances that compelled Sharif's release, the military regime has now lost the very raison d'être for its present control of the country. As for the Pakistan Muslim League, it has been deprived of its leadership, while the Pakistan Peoples Party has egg on its face, having just concluded an alliance with Sharif against the military regime.