Showing posts with label Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaaf (PTI). Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaaf (PTI). Show all posts

Sunday, January 1, 2012

Recalling PTI election of 1997

My father contested the general election on the ticket of the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaaf (PTI) in 1997. It was the first election of the PTI and the party lost all the seats. My dad bagged around 3,000 votes which were highest among the PTI candidates in Punjab.
The election taught my father many things. My father quit the active politics after that. The election campaign made a severe dent on our financial condition. We spent the money on campaign very wisely but still the campaign cost us around Rs 2 millions - most of it was the debt which my family returned during the next several years. We enforced budgetary cuts on everything in our home except our education.
The PTI was the most unpopular party. The Jew-lobby propaganda affected it badly.  Wherever my father held a meeting, people demanded clarifications on it. One of my father's friends, former Supreme Court Bar Association (SCBA) president Hamid Khan, also contested the election and lost it. Hamid Khan is still one of the leading personalities in the PTI, but many vanguards like my father quit the politics after the 1997 elections. The current SCBA president Yaseen Azad also ran the election. He has disclosed his political affiliation with the PTI in a recent interview. He has also quit the general politics.
We observed the mindset of ordinary Pakistanis about the democracy during the campaign.
Often people, holding a few dozens national identity cards of local people, would visit my father and offer him to buy the cards. My father didn't accept that, but his opponent - far richer than him - bought them. This practice is still prevalent today. Rich candidates buy the cards of their opponent's potential voters, preventing them from casting their votes. Money is also distributed among the potential voters to keep them faithful. Often a voter sells his vote to all the contesting candidates.
People having influence over 20 or so people, start behaving like king makers. They demand money from the candidate on the pretext of opening an election office or holding a corner meeting in their area. These people start pressing the candidate soon after his candidature is announced. Nothing discourages honest and upright people form running the elections than this public mindset. And this mindset is responsible when Air Marshal (r) Asghar Khan loses elections to a person far inferior than Khan's character, but far richer than Khan.

Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Not so proper farewell to Javed Hashmi

One can count on fingers politicians like Javed Hashmi in Pakistan. He remained in jail for his principles for almost a decade. His political career is not tainted with corruption allegations and he talks sense most of the time.
Without badmouthing policies or leaders of his former party,  the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N), he joined the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaaf (PTI). The PML-N leadership has failed to give a proper farewell to their party's most loyalist parliamentarian. Hashmi, who paid tribute to the workers of the PML-N in his address at the PTI Karachi rally, is facing criticism.
This criticism is not coming from his former colleagues but family members of the PML-N leadership. Hamza Shahbaz and Captain (r) Safdar, both son and son-in-law, respectively, of PML-N leader Nawaz Sharif has criticised Hashmi's defection is a very degrading way.

Always a rebel!
Addressing a press conference in Peshawar, Captain Safdar, whose only claim to fame is his love marriage with the daughter of Nawaz Sharif, has said, "If Hashmi had mentioned this before, we could have collected Rs10 million for him in alms from Peshawar alone." The whole nation knows that if Hashmi was up for sale, Musharraf would have bought him. When the whole Nawaz Sharif family accepted exile instead of facing the trial, Hashmi faced it bravely. I wonder how Captain Safdar has forgotten the history so quickly. Safdar's statement is quite shameful for him.
Hamza Shahbaz was the first to criticise Hashmi, saying the PML-N is not affected by anyone leaving the it.
These two statements are enough to damage the PML-N's public image, which has been maintained by a group of senior journalists headed by Pervez Rashid. A proper farewell to Hashmi by the PML-N leadership would have lifted the PML-N's image.

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Questions everyone asks about Imran Khan

I avoid political discussions with strangers. I remain silent when I have to say no and nod my head for a yes. Whenever someone knows that I am a lawyer or had been a journalist, he asks me the following questions about Imran Khan.

Why Imran Khan is welcoming 'corrupt' politicians: You will hear this question everywhere. I was attending a marriage today and someone overhearing my discussion with my cousin asked the same. I told the person that if he does not join the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaaf (PTI) and run the election, then who will contest the election? The politicians joining the party, he replied.

Imran Khan has no policy: How can Imran Khan give a policy when he is not in a position to give a policy. Policies are formed and implemented when one is in the power and not when one is in the street rallying for elections.

Everyone joining Tehreek-e-Insaaf is corrupt: Not everyone in Pakistan is a saint.


Will Imran Khan pave my street if I vote for him: No. Just pray that he comes in the power and implements the rule of law. Pakistan badly needs the rule of law. Your unpaved street does not figure out among challenges facing Pakistan.