Let us see what is happening on this score in other civilised and not-so-civilised countries across the globe. What about the world’s largest democracy — India? Bangladesh? Sri Lanka? In the Philippines, it is the fourth generation of Aquinos which is ruling today. I am sure we all know who Megawati Sukarnoputri of Indonesia is. In Malaysia, Mahathir Mohammad, the former prime minister, had assumed a cult figure and ruled as a dictator. In Thailand, Yingluck Shinwatra, sister of Thaksin Shinwatra, the ousted and exiled former prime minister is now riding the popularity crust. The less said the better about Taiwan. In South Korea, it has been a tale of one martial law after the other for almost 45 years. In Iran, it is the Ayatollahs who ‘guide’ and ‘lead’ an elected parliament. Saudi Arabia? Don’t make me laugh. The jury is still out on the Arab Spring. Turkey, which has recently come out of the iron grip of its military, appears to be still struggling to keep the dreaded institution at bay. And what about the Kennedy clan in the US? They did try, didn’t they? Clinton followed Clinton, almost? And the Bush clan? After W and WH, Jeb is now getting primed for the White House.
We have tried the Monti option every time we suffered from extended military rule but still failed to remove the fundamental distortions from our economy. Considering their respective political support, I have no doubt about how Mr Qadri and Altaf Bhai would react if a caretaker government of their own choice were to strictly enforce the country’s tax laws across the board? How can you run a country if people earning taxable income refuse to pay their national dues and donors refuse to continue the dole unless the recipient collected taxes from its own people.
There appears to be an unofficial consensus among media pundits and political parties that Qadri is not his own man. But on the crucial question of who is pulling his strings there have been all kinds of speculations. The PPP, the army, and the US were the main suspects. But one by one most have since disappeared from the list. Qadri himself does not appear to be in any position, political or otherwise, to profit from the ensuing chaos following a successful sit-in in the capital on the due date. But the MQM stands to gain a lot. For starters, it can bargain for a decisive say in the formation of the Sindh interim government which, at the moment, it perhaps believes it is not in a position to influence as the provincial opposition has been won over by the PPP by sending its man to the Punjab Governor’s House. Altaf Bhai has already tendered an unconditional apology to the Supreme Court in the contempt case and postponed the threatened political drone attack by a couple of days. But the Supreme Court order for re-verification of voters’ list in Karachi and pressure for re-delimitation of constituencies in Karachi and Hyderabad seems to have pushed the MQM back to the wall. An expert political poker player, Altaf Bhai perhaps hopes to bluff his way out of the jam in the dust kicked up by the confusion following the MQM sponsored sit-in. Already there are reports that the MQM has taken over the Minhajul Quran’s media management and the way the huge public meeting of December 23, 2012 was arranged and organised, it is difficult not to suspect that the MQM’s presence on that day in Lahore was not limited only to the presence of its 50 workers.
Published in The Express Tribune, January 9th, 2013.
COMMENTS (15)
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Good article overall. Like some other comments above, due credit must be given to PTI for holding intra party elections. If they can do this transparently, all over Pakistan including for the post of Chairman, then my vote will be for PTI.
Thaskin Shinwatra in thailand has committed same crime as PPP did, favoring little bit rural population. that was not acceptable to uraban elite . it is very in interesting how urban middll calss along with military and judiciary has been removing him and his party from government again and again.
Class poliitcs is similar everywhere.
@nasser: Thanks for being honest. You must have touched a raw nerve of blind followers of IK. How could a parent live far away from his kids and still claim to lead our kids? One has to work in order to raise a family which some of us never do.
@nasser: His children live with their mother who is a citizen of England. If he had used his clout and connections in Pakistan to separate his sons from their mother, make them disappear in the labyrinth that is our homeland like other influential Pakistani elite/politicians, that would have been great right? showing his manliness by keeping his sons, his heirs with him to take over the reins from him. The mother is just a woman, that too a firangi woman, so her rights do not count here in the land of the pure. Bravo nasser saahab. You are a true man! :)
@nasser:
When is Khan bringing back his sons to study in the one education system that he has envisaged for Pakistan?
He does not have to--as a parent he can choose and as a civilized human, not a macho Pakistani male, his wife also has a say in it--they are children of both, not a property of Imran Khan.
Instead of shooting idiotic barbs, think about what you said: do you want a segregated system in our country that produces masters in some schools and slaves in the other? I am sure as a patriotic Pakistani, you wil agree that all children should have access to the a good basic system and if some still want to send their children to private schools, more power to them. This is the way it works in all civilized, developed countries, including our neighbour India. English is the language of trade, resaerch, publications, entertainment, science, politics and power. Therefore, ALL Pakistani children should have equal access to learning it and studying the various academic subjects in English.
MQM might be able to gain more with respect to politics in Sindh but it is being lampooned in the rest of Pakistan for what they are doing now. A PR disaster.
Slave mentality among the people makes it possible to create a cult figure t crop up everywhere in the world. What do such people do? Thye promise everything and deliver nothing, yet people keep on expecting miracles to come through such useless figures. For as long as people will not organise themslves to be able to play their part in those matters that affect their every day life, corruption and lawlessness and all sorts of adversity will remain order of the day and people at large will continue to endure it.
@nasser: First let the system come then you are free to ask this question...
@john the Baptist:
When is Khan bringing back his sons to study in the one education system that he has envisaged for Pakistan?
A great Op Ed by the ET thanks for that. I agree with you completely on the point that all those shouting against cult/dynastic politics never had their chief elected. They have lifetime party chiefs even if the pawns are elected or nominated. All their lives Nawab Nasrullah Khan, Asghar Khan, Wali Khan and all the current party chiefs did not give up their post. Sharif would not do it either in his life. The rest of the parties are also based upon the personality of their chiefs except JI.
@Rehan Mohammed:
PTI is a joke to all the morons brought up on a diet of nepotism.
@John the Baptist: PTI is a joke.....at least MQM is a proven reality, although I do not vote for them either.
Both leaders, Qadri Sahib and Altaf Bhai, have reinforced their self-confidence by acquiring Canadian and British citizenships respectively. This, perhaps in their own minds, makes their parties immune from holding elections. Hence the desire to delay elections in Pakistan.
Please spare the PTI from your wrath--it is not a personality cult party. Imran is 60 and we all want him have a long life but I can't see him as Chairman beyond a ten year timeframe. And thankfully, his children are learning to read and write in a good environment, instead o being groomed by Pappa Jani to take over the reins of exploitation. What will it take to request some honesty from the "political analysts"? PTI is the only party which is conducting mass elections for party posts--even the Jamaat had a very small voting polity. Please if you can't be supportive of this Democratic Party, please at least be fair. Thank you.
Interesting article. On a side note, to your point on political parties not having internal democracy, PTI has already kicked off the intra-party elections. Islamabad and KPK elections have been completed already and rest are due for completion within January.