Damage control: Fury prompts govt to offer olive branch
MQM blames Zulfiqar Mirza for spike in violence.
ISLAMABAD:
A fresh wave of deadly violence in Karachi on Friday provoked a reaction from the Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) in the National Assembly, prompting Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani to offer an olive branch in damage control.
Earlier on Friday, the MQM legislators also walked out of a Sindh Assembly and Senate session over the same issue.
Both the MQM and Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) had shown restraint overnight, and refrained from going overboard in their criticism of each other.
However, angered by the killing of its supporters in various localities of Karachi, MQM members squarely blamed the controversial PPP leader, Sindh Senior Minister Zulfiqar Mirza, for the violence, calling him a ‘notorious patron of terrorists’ and an ‘engineer of violence’ against political opponents.
Just a few days ago, Mirza had claimed that he had met with Afaq Ahmed, the jailed leader of Mohajir Qaumi Movement-Haqiqi (MQM-H) – Muttahida’s arch rival in Karachi.
MQM lawmakers staged a token walkout to protest against the latest killing spree in Karachi when it was joined by the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) in an apparent attempt to consolidate their bid for a joint parliamentary opposition.
MQM lawmaker Sajid Ahmed was the first to raise the issue in the house.
Flaring tempers and stirred emotions created a panic in the ranks of the ruling PPP, inducing Prime Minister Gilani to condemn the killings and promise a probe.
“Karachi is an important economic hub. We can’t afford the city to plunge into violence. We all will have to look for a solution,” said Gilani.
The premier said the government would make sure that peace was restored and order established in the city. He did not elaborate, however. He did not respond to allegations against Zulfiqar Mirza and the Sindh government either.
He restricted himself to a condemnation of incidents that took place in Malir and Landi localities earlier in the day.
‘Innocent’
While the MQM legislators remained focused on the spike in Karachi violence, PML-N members kept defending a party colleague who escaped from the custody of Islamabad police last week.
MNA Anjum Aqeel, who is facing a Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) probe, was brought to the house by police after Deputy Speaker Faisal Karim Kundi ordered his production overnight.
In an uncharacteristic, emotional speech to the house, Anjum pleaded not guilty and said charges against him were ‘fabricated’ at the behest of former law minister Babar Awan.
He offered himself up for an inquiry by a bipartisan committee of the house.
Another PML-N lawmaker Khawaja Saad Rafiq also blamed Awan and Interior Minister Rehman Malik for wrongly involving Aqeel in a criminal case.
Published in The Express Tribune, July 23rd, 2011.
A fresh wave of deadly violence in Karachi on Friday provoked a reaction from the Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) in the National Assembly, prompting Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani to offer an olive branch in damage control.
Earlier on Friday, the MQM legislators also walked out of a Sindh Assembly and Senate session over the same issue.
Both the MQM and Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) had shown restraint overnight, and refrained from going overboard in their criticism of each other.
However, angered by the killing of its supporters in various localities of Karachi, MQM members squarely blamed the controversial PPP leader, Sindh Senior Minister Zulfiqar Mirza, for the violence, calling him a ‘notorious patron of terrorists’ and an ‘engineer of violence’ against political opponents.
Just a few days ago, Mirza had claimed that he had met with Afaq Ahmed, the jailed leader of Mohajir Qaumi Movement-Haqiqi (MQM-H) – Muttahida’s arch rival in Karachi.
MQM lawmakers staged a token walkout to protest against the latest killing spree in Karachi when it was joined by the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) in an apparent attempt to consolidate their bid for a joint parliamentary opposition.
MQM lawmaker Sajid Ahmed was the first to raise the issue in the house.
Flaring tempers and stirred emotions created a panic in the ranks of the ruling PPP, inducing Prime Minister Gilani to condemn the killings and promise a probe.
“Karachi is an important economic hub. We can’t afford the city to plunge into violence. We all will have to look for a solution,” said Gilani.
The premier said the government would make sure that peace was restored and order established in the city. He did not elaborate, however. He did not respond to allegations against Zulfiqar Mirza and the Sindh government either.
He restricted himself to a condemnation of incidents that took place in Malir and Landi localities earlier in the day.
‘Innocent’
While the MQM legislators remained focused on the spike in Karachi violence, PML-N members kept defending a party colleague who escaped from the custody of Islamabad police last week.
MNA Anjum Aqeel, who is facing a Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) probe, was brought to the house by police after Deputy Speaker Faisal Karim Kundi ordered his production overnight.
In an uncharacteristic, emotional speech to the house, Anjum pleaded not guilty and said charges against him were ‘fabricated’ at the behest of former law minister Babar Awan.
He offered himself up for an inquiry by a bipartisan committee of the house.
Another PML-N lawmaker Khawaja Saad Rafiq also blamed Awan and Interior Minister Rehman Malik for wrongly involving Aqeel in a criminal case.
Published in The Express Tribune, July 23rd, 2011.