Election or selection?

For the ANP to campaign freely under these circumstances is not just difficult but nearly impossible.


Editorial April 27, 2013
The target of the blast was ANP candidate Bashir Jan, but he remained safe in the incident. PHOTO: AFP

Every other day is a day of mourning for the Awami National Party (ANP), which has been attacked at least 10 times just this month. On April 26, two attacks were carried out against the ANP in Karachi. In the second and more deadly attack at a corner meeting of the party, over 10 people were killed and around 45 injured. The Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) claimed responsibility for both attacks. The ANP has been the main target of militants in different parts of the country, especially in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa (K-P). For the ANP to campaign freely under these circumstances is not just difficult but nearly impossible.

Despite terrorist attacks, the ANP must be commended for braving these threats and not boycotting the electoral process. Adnan Wazir, an independent candidate in K-P whose rally was attacked in the Frontier Region Bannu last month, had to distance himself from the ANP in view of TTP threats. After claiming that he had nothing to do with the party, Wazir was “pardoned” by the militant group. No wonder the ANP has started asking whether this is an election or “selection” process. The battle lines are clear. If a political party espouses liberal views, it is the TTP’s enemy. Thus, the PPP, the ANP and the MQM have directly been threatened by the TTP. Parties with ambiguous and vague approach on terrorism and the Taliban do not face similar threats.

Instead of condemning these attacks, some political parties are either silent or their condemnations have been rather muted. Not only is this a cowardly response but a highly despicable one, to say the least. Those who have been attacked and have lost their lives in terrorist attacks are Pakistani citizens. All political parties who have not condemned these attacks unequivocally should be censured. Never in the history of Pakistan have we seen an election campaign this bloody. A comprehensive counterterrorism strategy should be put in place for the elections and the caretaker government must provide adequate security to the ANP, the MQM and the PPP.

Published in The Express Tribune, April 28th, 2013.

COMMENTS (2)

Salman | 11 years ago | Reply

Army take over karachi please!

FN | 11 years ago | Reply

My opinion For a start I condemn all this barbarity and madness. But Maybe I'm wrong & just speculating but those who wronged are trembling in fear. TTP are in the picture but there's more under the surface, more that just what meets the eye. Why is TTP suddenly so angry with MQM/PPP now that elections are around the corner? I don't buy it. The parties crying foul should have genuinely done something about terrorism. The parties being targeted (or made to look) were the ones in power. They were probably were too busy in something else, prioritized God knows what.

Elections must not be delayed. If the caretaker setup can't help now, they still won't two months from now. Vote.

Replying to X

Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.

For more information, please see our Comments FAQ