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What is Experienced in Political
Life
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Whenever he holds the upper
hand, he goes about the earth corrupting it, destroying (people's)
crops and breeding stock. Allah does not love corruption.
(Surat al-Baqara: 205)
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Justice,
morality and honesty should permeate every moment of one's life.
In our current situation where many of us live in parliamentary
democracies, this is especially true for politicians. A politician
is responsible for a lot of people. People turn to him for solutions.
Thus, it is essential that he is fair in his decisions, makes no
prejudicial discrimination against people, correctly identifies
the needy and devises pertinent actions addressing their problems.
While rendering his services for the public good, he should co-operate
with experts and appoint qualified people who can get results. If
he is able to find out the reasons for an interruption in a service,
a politician should rapidly find viable solutions and make swift
changes in his policies, if necessary. In the public's best interests,
he should have the skills to prioritise.
Nevertheless for some, rather than being a public service,
politics has turned into a profitable industry. In this sense, in
politics, someone is considered successful who keeps power, consolidates
and secures it despite all unfavourable circumstances and, if possible,
acquires more power. Once this becomes the usual way of politics,
it is no surprise that all forms of corruption and fraud are structured
into the system.
Everywhere, west and east, in developed as well as developing
countries, it is possible to see that politics is fused with business.
Thus, it is not uncommon to see examples of those who, abusing politics
for personal benefit, risk their political careers or are forced
from office following "shares for favours" scandals. In many authoritarian
systems, leaders fund expensive tastes and indulge in extravagance
while their people fight hunger and epidemic. Mobutu, the ousted
president of Zaire, is a good example. While the Zairian people
fought for a loaf of bread, every month Mobutu was sending his personal
plane to France to fetch his coiffeur. He amassed a huge fortune,
regarding all the natural resources and diamond mines of his country
as his personal assets. Furthermore, he allowed western countries
to benefit from this natural wealth of Zaire while his people experienced
deteriorating economic circumstances and civic unrest due to tribal
clashes.
No society is immune to such practises unless the Qur'an
reigns. In irreligious communities, people hardly attach any meaning
to concepts like justice, mercy, love, respect and honesty, since
everyone pursues his own interests and shows unquenchable greed.
In a verse, Allah stresses the dimensions of the threat such people
pose to societies:
Whenever he holds the upperhand,
he goes about the earth corrupting it, destroying (people's) crops
and breeding stock. Allah does not love corruption. (Surat al-Baqara:
205)
It is of no avail to expect any change in the aforementioned
human characteristics as long as people do not adhere to the Book
of Allah. However, in a country where people have fear of Allah
and where conscience rules, miscarriages of justice and abuses of
power are not allowed. The problems of people are diagnosed and
treated properly and services work effectively. The rewards for
public service rendered only to earn the good pleasure of Allah,
the help extended only for His sake are expected not in this world,
but in the Hereafter. Throughout history, Allah communicated the
divine message to people through His messengers. These messengers
only invited them to the religion of truth. However, the reactions
of people to these messengers were disbelief and they often suspected
hidden purposes behind their sincere efforts. The answers of the
messengers to the disbelieving people were the same:
Say: 'I do not ask you for any
wage for it, nor am I a man of false pretensions.' (Surah Sad: 86)
My people! I do not ask you for
any wage for it. My wage is the responsibility of Him Who brought
me into being. So will you not use your intellect? (Surah Hud: 51)
Those having faith in Allah follow the example of such
conduct, which is praised in the Qur'an. They expect no worldly
gain in any form in return for services and aid. In the political
life of disbelieving societies, however, political issues, both
internal and foreign, and personal/party interests are intimately
linked. This being the case, political life has its fair share of
rogues apt to take decisions contrary to public or national interest.
The methods employed to ensure these circles' support are public
investments serving the best interests of particular interest groups,
opening credits for them or simply ignoring corruption or fraud.
The lobbying incorporated into the political system in the United
States best explains how the system works. Huge sums of undisclosed
donations are made to finance the election campaigns of candidates.
The purpose is to secure a seat for someone in the Senate, someone
who will steer the type of politics the donors favour. In one of
its issues, The Economist dealt with the lavishly funded electoral
campaigns in the USA stressing that in 1992 alone contributions
amounted to 3 billion dollars. Using illegal contributions, lobbies
even achieve the power of making sanctions against other governments.
Striking indeed is the scale of the pressure on politicians, when
one considers that politicians never dare to be at variance with
the demands of their contributors. Politicians being "guided" by
this fear, adopt policies suiting the best interests of these interest
groups or they create artificial crises. Sometimes political parties
suffer intra-party clashes. Even, various insidious methods are
employed to cause unrest within a country, thereby laying the appropriate
ground for interest groups to benefit.
Close links between interest groups and those holding
power cause countries to drift into chaos, most apparently in the
examples of Latin American dictatorships. For the last five or six
decades, leaders of fascist regimes in Latin American countries
have lived in extravagance while the masses live on or below the
breadline. Still today, power constantly shifts from dictatorships
to juntas and vice versa. The military juntas rule with an iron
fist, essentially deriving power from the pressure they apply to
the masses. In these countries, which are the crossroads of narcotics
trafficking, the clashes of the interests of those in power and
of the drug cartels hinder the development of stability. These circles,
flourishing only in chaos, maintain their continuity through pressure
and terror. Thus, brutality, clashes and civil wars are interminable.
In Colombia, 28 thousand murders occurred in 1992 alone. This figure
serves well to depict the form of brutality occurring there. As
we have seen, not living by the Qur'an and the Sunnah also accounts
for the existence of power-holders who shut their eyes to all forms
of violence.
Another striking point in political life is that authority
and power are granted to those who, by nature and qualifications,
do not deserve them. This is what the disbelieving system is based
upon: it is not essential to be qualified in order to be assigned
to a particular position. In these issues, vested interests become
the driving forces in decision-making. However, in the Qur'an Allah
commands the contrary:
Allah commands you to render back
your Trusts to those to whom they are due; And when you judge between
people, to judge with justice. How excellent is what Allah exhorts
you to do! Allah is All-Hearing, All-Seeing. (Surat al-Nisa': 58)
In a society where people do not live by the Qur'an and,
accordingly, duties and responsibilities are not allocated on the
basis of skills and qualifications, anyone who fills a vacant senior
position primarily practises nepotism and cronyism. For politicians
and parties alike, vested interests and political preferences always
take precedence. Working for the public good is mere rhetoric for
use during electoral campaigns while addressing the voters. In accordance
with this understanding, public services, if any, are provided not
to poor villages or towns but to provinces where electors are concentrated.
Disbelief is responsible for this distorted understanding
and this immorality. People, who do not conduct themselves responsibly
and conscientiously, do not fear Allah. They do not show mercy to
people and act fairly for the same reason. Feigning ignorance of
the fact that they will give account for every deed they do in this
life, they commit all forms of mischief and immorality. Thus, the
duty of those who are committed to ending this misery and preparing
a promising future is to adhere to the Qur'an and communicate it
to people. It is the duty of all believers to inform people about
the commands of Allah with respect to moral values, summon them
to live by them and warn them against being wicked. Those ignoring
this duty, or those postponing it, should fear that, in the hereafter,
they may fail to give account for their insensitivity.
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