//php if(!empty($last_str)){if(!preg_match('~[0-9]+~', $first_str)){echo $title;}else{echo $last_str; }}else{echo $title;}?>342: Pakistan’s Democracy Dilemma
Shahid Javed Burki, Visiting Senior Research Fellow, ISAS
2 September 2014
Democracy gets established only with practice. If any proof is needed for this proposition,
Pakistan’s leaders and its people need to look just across the border – at India. India was born
with a considerably more political maturity than was the case with its sibling, Pakistan. It had
a well-developed political party that had not only fought for independence but had also
defined what an independent India would look like. Unlike the Congress Party, Pakistan’s
Muslim League was a one-issue party – the establishment of an independent state for the
Muslim community of British India. Once a part of that dream was realised, the party drifted
and was lost in the political wilderness. India, on other hand, moved quickly to establish a
political order. It appeared, in May 2013 – when the Pakistan Muslim League (Nawaz) won a
convincing victory in the elections and assumed the reins of power from the rival Pakistan
People’s Party that was allowed to complete its full five-year term – Pakistan too was headed
towards political stability. But that has not been the case so far.