The PPP is complacent that Sindh is inextricably intertwined with it and, therefore, will always tolerate its poor performance. The Communist Party of India-Marxist, CPI-M, is an epitome of the complacency syndrome. The 34-year-long unrivalled rule of the CPI-M in West Bengal state of India met a humiliating wipeout at the hands of the Trinamool Congress, merely a 13-year-old political outfit, led by Mamata Banerjee. Her party smacked a landslide defeat to the CPI-M with a yawning margin of 226 against 62 seats. AB Bardhan of the CPI-M very pertinently explained the underlying causes of what rocked its boat saying, “One thing the Left has underestimated is that a great Indian middle class has grown up in the last few decades. The Communist regime had fallen out of touch with the aspirations of the people it governed.” A befitting comment was made by Laloo Alam, a member of the CPI-M’s youth wing: “For 34 years, the CPI-M progressively killed the state. We were blind followers then; didn’t look beyond the party. We were wrong.”
Parallels can easily be drawn between the two cases. The conglomerate of Sindhi nationalist parties and their incipient affinity with the PML-F and the PML-N cannot be shrugged off smugly. Admittedly, nationalist parties in Sindh are novices and not savvy enough with electoral chicaneries, yet they are potent enough to galvanise disgruntled masses and ruffle the PPP’s monopoly over electoral politics in Sindh. It may not be imminent but would not be a distant reality if the PPP didn’t introspect and remedy its demeanour. Scoffing at these new realities would be mere ineptness. It is becoming increasingly difficult for the rapidly flourishing middle class of Sindhi society to subscribe to hollow sloganeering. The anachronistic feudal structure is crumbling and will not sustain for long under artificial props. It would be saner for the PPP to bid it adieu rather than perpetuate it for political expediency. The PPP seems remiss of changing the social configuration of its traditional constituency. It will be difficult to cajole the people of Sindh further with the obsolete dogma of roti, kapra aur makan, as the same has yet to see the light of day, even after 40 years of unflinching allegiance of Sindhis to the PPP.
Published in The Express Tribune, February 5th, 2013.
COMMENTS (9)
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very nice writeup, i fully agreed with the views of memon sb,
Voting for PPP is not fine but voting for much notorious feudals under Muslim League banner is acceptable?! It is remarkable how article after article continue to appear in newspapers making it sound that all waderas of Sindh are in PPP and Muslim Leagues and nationalists are some sort of anti-feudal alliance when in reality they are headed by the most powerful feudals of Sindh.
@Mirza: To millions of unsophisticated right wingers out there, please do mention how PPP is a better alternative than sloganeering? People are not right wing or left wing, they have basic needs that need to be addressed through simple governance. It's about time jiyalas wake up and smell the coffee. Everyone criticizing PPP is not a right winger or anti-democracy activist.
Kick out this filth. Vote PTI.
Quite interesting piece of writing. I agree with you on many points especially the one which mentions the exacerbated situation in Sindh. I believe PPP cannot win a landslide victory without the assistance of the nationalists and their ilk but wait a second Zardari is the leader a very clever and non-sincere politician in Pakistan he may work something out to win the elections in Sindh!
Well I do hope the writer is right in his analysis that support for PPP(Zardari) is ebbing away in Sindh. However this written piece is not only excessively turgid but proliferates in prolix. Is there an editor at ET reading these Op Ed submissions or is he/she asleep on the job?
Whatever PPP has done with the sindh and its people........has been called by the sindhis themselves. Isnt it true that there is virtually no accountability of PPP in rural sindh. People never questioned it.........its as if sindhi votes are in PPP's pocket. It plays sindh card, martydom cards, poverty card etc. to gain sympathies.
To summarize, if the sindhis want to change their situation for better.they should start asking questions and stop buying political dramas like one played at garhi khuda buksh every year. they should understand that decisions are to be based regardless of linguistic or ethnic concerns and on merit.
Very interesting read but I feel you have left out one aspect of the so called democratic voting process as we experience it. That is, the candidate (say PPP) does not have win over the people, they have to win over (bribe) the person who controls the vote of these people, we are talking of the rural vote bank. So they are dealing with much smaller numbers and as such much more manageable. I may be wrong but I think Musharraf changed the system in order to broaden the base but the present government turned it back.