PML-N looks to unite parties on anti-govt platform

Party leader­s say Punjab CM will soon establ­ish ‘direct contac­t’ with MQM hierar­chy.


Zia Khan June 30, 2011

ISLAMABAD:


Preparing to create a grand opposition alliance, Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) chief Nawaz Sharif is looking to gather all political parties hostile towards the government, including the Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM), on a “minimum agenda”: to overthrow the current setup, his associates said.


At least two top leaders of the PML-N told The Express Tribune on Wednesday that Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif would soon establish ‘direct contact’ with the MQM hierarchy, including its London-based chief, Altaf Hussain. They did not, however, specify when or how any such contact would be established.

Simultaneously, some other associates of Sharif had been tasked to approach the rightwing opponents of President Asif Ali Zardari’s government, including the Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam (JUI) of Maulana Fazlur Rehman.

Both the MQM and the JUI-F walked away from an alliance with the ruling Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP).

Officials in the PML-N said the decision to go all out to dislodge the government was taken during a recent meeting of top party leaders in Lahore chaired by Nawaz Sharif.

They added that the resignation by MQM members from both federal and provincial cabinets to join the opposition had lured the PML-N into thinking that it might be the right time for gathering their support against the government.

“We believe it is the best time to go in for a kill … it looks like the iron is hot and now is the time that we can hit it as hard as possible,” said a PML-N official, who attended the meeting.

A spokesperson of the party also confirmed that the PML-N was looking forward to working with the MQM as a more “coordinated opposition” and both groups could explore “common ground” against the government.

However, MNA Ahsan Iqbal denied that a high level contact was being established with the MQM or that the PML-N was hoping for a formal alliance with the party.

“We are not strangers to each other … we know each other and have been maintaining a shared stance on various issues recently and I think we can work together in the future. But this does not necessarily mean we can become partners,” Iqbal said.

He added that the alleged rigging in the recent Kashmir elections, unbridled corruption in government departments and the poor rule of law were the issues that could bring the two groups together.

A close associate of Sharif, Zulfikar Khosa, also told the media in Lahore that there were prospects of the PML-N and the MQM working together in the days to come.

According to officials, the PML-N chief had barred his party leaders from issuing hostile statements against the MQM and Altaf Hussain, an issue that has been keeping both parties away from each other in recent years.

According to the plans, the PML-N would hit the streets with its campaign to dislodge the government immediately after the month of Ramadan that ends early September.

Before that, Iqbal said, the group would complete its lingering reorganisation campaign by the end of next month.

The Express Tribune tried to seek comments from a few MQM leaders but none of them was available.

Published in The Express Tribune, June 30th, 2011.

COMMENTS (21)

Mark | 13 years ago | Reply I'm not going to give an opinion on any of the groups. I don't know enough about their history to do so. But, I will say that people should be skeptical of the revolutionary-sounding claims. Not in the sense of right or wrong. But, in the sense that just about anyone can come to that conclusion. The hard part is finding someone who can pull it off gracefully, if at all. If you don't have the right people, you will have a lot more dead people and an even worse economy as it will sit in the state of perpetual chaos that will exist in its wake for far too long rather than intervening and pulling the country through it and out of it fast enough for a new form of stability to take hold.
Mirza | 13 years ago | Reply For some who are thinking of bringing the PML-Q back into the Nawaz party, there may be a shock waiting for them? Let me make it crystal clear that I have no party affiliation except Democratic Party in the US; they are lesser of the two evils. As a Pakistani by birth I am very close to Pakistani people and their plight and lack of civic facilities, illiteracy, disease, hunger, fanaticism and other social evils. I am a supporter of democracy in Pakistan, irrespective of who is in power. Nations are not made in a few years, it takes decades and centuries. Once there would be several consecutive elections, dirt would be sieved out and better people would emerge. I have full faith in Pakistani people that they are intelligent and second to none. When India can make progress with all the poverty and overpopulation Pakistan can do better as well. The fact that Bangladesh which was most densely populated province of Pakistan and had lower per capita income than West Pakistan, is a peaceful democracy and making progress after liberation, why cannot we? This is my motivating factor and Quaid’s dream as well, to see Pakistan a liberal, secular democracy with equality and progress. There is nothing un-Islamic or anti-Pakistan in this. .
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