Something shifted overnight deep within the MQM hierarchy in Karachi, and when Farooq Sattar was released on August 23, he dropped the equivalent of a political bombshell, the explosion of which is going to have consequences yet unseen. He announced what amounts to a soft coup within the party, saying that Altaf Hussain’s speech was “regrettable”, “anti-Pakistan” and “anti-MQM”, and that the events of August 22 must never be allowed to happen again. The MQM will henceforth be run from Pakistan, said Mr Sattar, and in that moment the status and position of Altaf Hussain as the unquestioned and unquestionable supremo of the MQM was shaken to its roots.
Reference was made to the frequent outbursts from London that were bad for the party and its image, and that Altaf Hussain needed to “resolve his issues” before going on air to cause yet more mayhem. Mr Sattar called for offices to be reopened and said that the party would announce further developments within the “next few days”. Whatever they are, the unity of the MQM is on a knife-edge, but as a party it will survive. Whether Altaf Hussain will survive as its leader, however, is in considerable doubt.
Published in The Express Tribune, August 24th, 2016.
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