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Pakistan
Index
In January 1951, Ayub Khan succeeded General Sir
Douglas
Gracey as commander in chief of the Pakistan Army,
becoming the
first Pakistani in that position. Although Ayub Khan's
military
career was not particularly brilliant and although he had
not
previously held a combat command, he was promoted over
several
senior officers with distinguished careers. Ayub Khan
probably
was selected because of his reputation as an able
administrator,
his presumed lack of political ambition, and his lack of
powerful
group backing. Coming from a humble family of an obscure
Pakhtun
tribe, Ayub Khan also lacked affiliation with major
internal
power blocks and was, therefore, acceptable to all
elements.
Within a short time of his promotion, however, Ayub
Khan had
become a powerful political figure. Perhaps more than any
other
Pakistani, Ayub Khan was responsible for seeking and
securing
military and economic assistance from the United States
and for
aligning Pakistan with it in international affairs. As
army
commander in chief and for a time as minister of defense
in 1954,
Ayub Khan was empowered to veto virtually any government
policy
that he felt was inimical to the interests of the armed
forces.
By 1958 Ayub Khan and his fellow officers decided to
turn out
the "inefficient and rascally" politicians--a task easily
accomplished without bloodshed. Ayub Khan's philosophy was
indebted to the Mughal and viceregal traditions; his rule
was
similarly highly personalized. Ayub Khan justified his
assumption
of power by citing the nation's need for stability and the
necessity for the army to play a central role. When
internal
stability broke down in the 1960s, he remained
contemptuous of
lawyer-politicians and handed over power to his fellow
army
officers.
Ayub Khan used two main approaches to governing in his
first
few years. He concentrated on consolidating power and
intimidating the opposition. He also aimed to establish
the
groundwork for future stability through altering the
economic,
legal, and constitutional institutions.
The imposition of martial law in 1958 targeted
"antisocial"
practices such as abducting women and children, black
marketeering, smuggling, and hoarding. Many in the Civil
Service
of Pakistan and Police Service of Pakistan were
investigated and
punished for corruption, misconduct, inefficiency, or
subversive
activities. Ayub Khan's message was clear: he, not the
civil
servants, was in control.
Sterner measures were used against the politicians. The
PRODA
prescribed fifteen years' exclusion from public office for
those
found guilty of corruption. The Elective Bodies
Disqualification
Order (EBDO) authorized special tribunals to try former
politicians for "misconduct," an infraction not clearly
defined.
Prosecution could be avoided if the accused agreed not to
be a
candidate for any elective body for a period of seven
years.
About 7,000 individuals were "EBDOed." Some people,
including
Suhrawardy, who was arrested, fought prosecution.
The Press and Publications Ordinance was amended in
1960 to
specify broad conditions under which newspapers and other
publications could be commandeered or closed down. Trade
organizations, unions, and student groups were closely
monitored
and cautioned to avoid political activity, and
imams (see Glossary)
at mosques were warned against including
political
matters in sermons.
On the whole, however, the martial law years were not
severe.
The army maintained low visibility and was content to
uphold the
traditional social order. By early 1959, most army units
had
resumed their regular duties. Ayub Khan generally left
administration in the hands of the civil bureaucracy, with
some
exceptions.
Efforts were made to popularize the regime while the
opposition was muzzled. Ayub Khan maintained a high public
profile, often taking trips expressly to "meet the
people." He
was also aware of the need to address some of the acute
grievances of East Pakistan. To the extent possible, only
Bengali
members of the civil service were posted in the East Wing;
previously, many of the officers had been from the West
Wing and
knew neither the region nor the language. Dhaka was
designated
the legislative capital of Pakistan, while the newly
created
Islamabad became the administrative capital. Central
government
bodies, such as the Planning Commission, were now
instructed to
hold regular sessions in Dhaka. Public investment in East
Pakistan increased, although private investment remained
heavily
skewed in favor of West Pakistan. The Ayub Khan regime was
so
highly centralized, however, that, in the absence of
democratic
institutions, densely populated and politicized Bengal
continued
to feel it was being slighted.
Between 1958 and 1962, Ayub Khan used martial law to
initiate
a number of reforms that reduced the power of groups
opposing
him. One such group was the landed aristocracy. The Land
Reform
Commission was set up in 1958, and in 1959 the government
imposed
a ceiling of 200 hectares of irrigated land and 400
hectares of
unirrigated land in the West Wing for a single holding. In
the
East Wing, the landholding ceiling was raised from
thirty-three
hectares to forty-eight hectares
(see Farm Ownership and Land Reform
, ch. 3). Landholders retained their dominant
positions in
the social hierarchy and their political influence but
heeded
Ayub Khan's warnings against political assertiveness.
Moreover,
some 4 million hectares of land in West Pakistan, much of
it in
Sindh, was released for public acquisition between 1959
and 1969
and sold mainly to civil and military officers, thus
creating a
new class of farmers having medium-sized holdings. These
farms
became immensely important for future agricultural
development,
but the peasants benefited scarcely at all.
In 1955 a legal commission was set up to suggest
reforms of
the family and marriage laws. Ayub Khan examined its
report and
in 1961 issued the Family Laws Ordinance. Among other
things, it
restricted polygyny and "regulated" marriage and divorce,
giving
women more equal treatment under the law than they had had
before. It was a humane measure supported by women's
organizations in Pakistan, but the ordinance could not
have been
promulgated if the vehement opposition to it from the
ulama and
the fundamentalist Muslim groups had been allowed free
expression. However, this law which was similar to the one
passed
on family planning, was relatively mild and did not
seriously
transform the patriarchal pattern of society.
Ayub Khan adopted an energetic approach toward economic
development that soon bore fruit in a rising rate of
economic
growth. Land reform, consolidation of holdings, and stern
measures against hoarding were combined with rural credit
programs and work programs, higher procurement prices,
augmented
allocations for agriculture, and, especially, improved
seeds to
put the country on the road to self-sufficiency in food
grains in
the process described as the Green Revolution.
The Export Bonus Vouchers Scheme (1959) and tax
incentives
stimulated new industrial entrepreneurs and exporters.
Bonus
vouchers facilitated access to foreign exchange for
imports of
industrial machinery and raw materials. Tax concessions
were
offered for investment in less-developed areas. These
measures
had important consequences in bringing industry to Punjab
and
gave rise to a new class of small industrialists.
Data as of April 1994
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