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Qureshi, Imran PTI’s only heavyweights?

(12 posts)
  1. Sulaiman Dar
    Member

    ISLAMABAD: Former foreign minister and PPP dissident Shah Mehmood Qureshi has landed in Imran Khan’s party. But will he prove to be the proverbial jewel in the crown for Pakistan Tehrik-i-Insaaf? He just might, because apart from him the politicians making a beeline for the PTI are not heavyweights.

    Most of them either lost or were not awarded their parties’ tickets in the last election (which means their chances of getting a ticket come next election are limited). Whether they can secure a victory in the next election is unclear.

    Another interesting trend is that a majority of new entrants to the PTI who would be eying tickets to the national and provincial assemblies have worked under Gen Musharraf’s regime in various capacities.

    Sardar Ghulam Abbas who twice served as Chakwal district nazim under Gen Musharraf’s devolution plan has joined the PTI.

    Before this, he was vice-president of the PML-Q in Punjab. After the PPP and PML-Q having joined hands at the centre, it appears that Mr Abbas is not hopeful of securing a joint candidature of the two parties, hence his decision to go with the PTI, according to a local journalist. Being a sitting nazim, he couldn’t contest the last general election.

    Faiz Tamman, another heavy weight and known turncoat in Chakwal politics, has also joined the PTI. Following a controversy surrounding his BA degree, Mr Tamman resigned last year in July as a PML-N MNA.

    In 2002, he had won the National Assembly seat as an independent candidate but later became part of the PML-Q government.

    In 2008, he was not given a ticket by the PML-Q, so he went for the PML-N and won against Chaudhry Pervez Elahi. He did apply for a PML-N ticket in by-election but the party refused and preferred Mumtaz Tamman, one of his relatives. Hence the PTI is the right choice for him at the moment.

    In Rawalpindi, former district nazim Tariq Kiani has joined the PTI and is proactively working for the party in the region. Mr Kiani claimed that he had chosen the PTI after being disillusioned with the PML-Q and PML-N.

    He is right in that the two parties have showed no interest in him. Mr Kiani worked closely with the PML-Q as a nazim. Later, he fell out of favour with PML-Q’s leaders and, as a result, couldn’t win a second term as nazim in 2005.

    In the 2008 elections he supported Javed Hashmi of the PML-N in Rawalpindi in hope of some political windfall, but remained out of mainstream politics. Now with the PTI in the field, he hopes to get back into the limelight.

    Malik Amin Aslam, who served as minister of state for environment from 2002 to 2007 in the PML-Q government, is another known figure from Taxila who will try his luck with PTI. He lost the 2008 election and has been out of the picture since then.

    In the neighbouring Fatehjang, Sardar Mohammad Ali, a former PML-Q MPA, wasn’t awarded ticket either by the PML-Q or PML-N and contested the 2008 election as an independent candidate but lost. He is with the PTI now.

    Malik Sohail, who couldn’t win the provincial assembly election on a PML-N ticket, has decided to join the PTI. There are reports that he had lost hopes of securing a ticket in the next election.

    A number of out of power heavyweights in Sadiqabad and neighbouring areas have also jumped onto the PTI bandwagon.

    They included Sheikh Fayyaz Khan who lost in Khanpur the last time as a PPP candidate. He joined the PTI along with Seth Mohammad Aslam and his son Mohammad Anwar from Rahim Yar Khan —a known Muslim League family in the area.

    Zafar Iqbal Warraich, a know turncoat who left the PPP for the PML-Q and remained as minister of state during 2002-07, has also joined the PTI.

    Mr Warraich lost in NA-196 to a PPP candidate who is sure to get the ticket this time in case the PPP and PML-Q remain in coalition. Therefore, Mr Warriach has decided to try is luck with the PTI.

    Sardar Rafique Haider Khan Leghari, former district nazim of Rahim Yar Khan, along with former union council nazims Sajjad Warraich and Asif Rashid of the PML-Q, and former PML-N MPA Chaudhry Shaukat Daud have joined the PTI.

    Of the six National Assembly seats of Rahim Yar Khan, four are held by the PPP and one each by PML-N and PML-F. In next general election, a major share of tickets will go to PPP’s sitting members. Therefore, those associated with the PML-Q are joining the PTI.

    Last but not the least, former PML-Q president and Punjab governor Mian Azhar is already in the PTI along with his supporters in Lahore. After having embarrassingly lost the 2002 election as the PML-Q chief, Mr Azhar is looking towards the PTI to help him come out of political wilderness.

    Buoyed by huge rallies the party has managed to stage in recently, including the one in Lahore, PTI chief Imran Khan is more than hopeful of sweeping the next election.

    But it is too early to predict so because except Mr Qureshi who himself joined the PTI after developing differences with his former party’s chief, President Asif Zardari, no major political figure has come to Mr Khan’s party.

    If there were a few resignations by members of parliament to join the PTI, it would be a great achievement and boost for the party, but at the moment only ‘leftovers’ from the mainstream parties are joining Imran Khan.

    http://www.dawn.com/2011/12/06/qureshi-imran-pti%e2%80%99s-only-heavyweights.html

    Posted 5 months ago on 06 Dec 2011 8:02 #
  2. Sulaiman Dar
    Member

    Just have a look at inqilabi losers and their profile.

    Posted 5 months ago on 06 Dec 2011 8:05 #
  3. siddiqi73
    Member

    So, to make a long a story short...this time around the dweeb tehreek would win more than ONE seat!! Oh, I've got tears of joy in my eyes.

    Posted 5 months ago on 06 Dec 2011 8:52 #
  4. arif786
    Member

    why are you so condescending and bitter..fight your battles on your own merits rather then being critical just for the heck

    Posted 5 months ago on 06 Dec 2011 9:06 #
  5. siddiqi73
    Member

    Buddy, the day the fan club starts to realize that until election time its gonna remain a fan club and a not a proper political party....that day I would quit being sarcastic and refrain from my tongue and cheek remarks....This is not battle, this is politics and more often than not; politics is based on perceptions.

    Posted 5 months ago on 06 Dec 2011 9:10 #
  6. Sulaiman Dar
    Member

    The real story behind Shah Mehmood Qureshi's reincarnation:

    Qureshi guide to invincibility

    LEGIONS of school and college students have used the ‘Qureshi Invincible Get-Through Guide’ for a short cut to examination success.

    Today followers of politics are attaching the same importance to Shah Mehmood Qureshi’s ‘guess work’ for an assessment of what kind of set-up the current power politics will lead Pakistan to.

    Pakistanis are keeping an eye on Mr Qureshi for the ‘asli’ or genuine tag just as they would want to distinguish the Invincible Qureshi guess paper from its unworthy clones. These curious souls are apart from those who view Shah Mehmood’s teaming up with Imran Khan as the latest event in the long-surviving tradition where question papers are leaked ahead for favourites.

    We must begin with the easier part. Shah Mehmood had been hurt by those wanting to rule Multan — at least Multan — unchallenged. He rebelled when he was denied the ministry where he didn’t exactly have to work under Prime Minister Gilani.

    There may have been some localised problems such as the emergence of Latif Khosa, another southern Punjab name with influence over President Zardari, as Punjab governor. The PPP’s alliance with the PML-Q might have been of concern.

    All said and done, Shah Mahmood since his arrival in the 1980s had been too mindful of his position in his home constituency to be seen making a voluntary exit from the National Assembly a year and more before elections.

    There was a long pregnant pause between his rebellion against the government and his resignation from parliament and the PPP. He waited and weighed his options. It was as if he was the one clean politician who would fit the ideology of anti-Sharif politics of the PTI just as he would fit the politics of PML-N. That kept those dependent on get-through guides guessing.

    In a country where the creation of alliances such as the Islami Jamhoori Ittehad is hailed as measure the establishment had to take to contain the evil and where deals with the establishment for power are common, Shah Mehmood’s expansive movement made people wonder whether his credentials were asli.

    His eventual partnership with Imran Khan meant he would now have to put on hold his friendship with Nawaz Sharif — the man who as an opponent has given the Pakistan Tehrik-i-Imran its purpose and late impetus in national politics.

    Those who had been predicting the next government will belong to Nawaz Sharif were a bit taken aback as they searched long and hard and deep for ways that could guarantee Imran a real shot at power. After a series of PTI public rallies, it is still not clear how he is going to get power. He is likely to do well in an election — but whether he’ll do well enough to lay claim to government no one is sure.

    The second route that can take Imran Khan and his expanding party to power is through a national government being so keenly discussed by all but the dreamers, diehard democrats and modern-day internationalists. This imaginary route is to lead to a removal — somehow — of the Zardari set-up and its replacement with clean politicians who have already flaunted considerable support among the public which is chanting for change.

    Each time such a scenario comes up for debate, each time a knowledgeable commentator jumps in to sound a reminder about how times have already changed. The contention is that certain occurrences and interventions that Pakistan has been repeatedly subjected to in the past have no future.

    It is said the situation has been transformed, international non-acceptability for an unelected government and media awareness often being the points this argument is based on. Also, there is this theory about pliable politicians and an establishment that can rule without having to conspicuously run the front offices.

    It is this last theory which, in the eyes of old guess-paper followers, creates room for Imran Khan’s entry. The feeling among the guessers is other politicians have all been used, have all erred and have little to offer the string-pullers that permanently reside in our minds.

    This is one reason why Imran is being viewed as a threat to Nawaz Sharif who still has considerable support in Punjab and is by no means a pushover in the public domain and an explanation of why so many seeking to be invincible or to simply taste power are landing at Imran’s door.

    Obviously, the PPP is doing its ‘best’, even when it chooses to feign ignorance of the growing Imran threat and targets Nawaz and his allies with its own warnings about the dangers inherent in their politics. The martyr refrain never leaves the PPP but here the reference to a coffin is employed even more strongly to counter any attempts at sending its government and president home prematurely.

    Babar Awan’s is a pre-emptive strike but Mr Awan with his resort to sounding the alarm bells ends up feeding the very thoughts he is avowedly seeking to quell. It conveys a message that President Zardari is ready to fight it out till the end. It is a sign of desperation born out of a growing challenge to the Zardari rule.

    The divided opposition is in agreement on one crucial point: that a fair poll is impossible under President Zardari. The objective is to force Zardari out and create room for a poll under an interim head of state.

    The argument is that it could not mean a national government that finds itself embroiled in work that would require it to perpetuate itself ‘just a little longer’. But this view is still often overwhelmed by old fears that have a history of coming true time and again.

    The politicians remain as discredited as ever. The aware media is being pressurised to come up with answers. Old fears persist.

    It is not that easy to rule out the other option, with its old and new, judicious and apparently not so judicious manifestations.

    The writer is Dawn’s resident editor in Lahore.

    http://www.dawn.com/2011/12/06/qureshi-guide-to-invincibility.html

    Posted 5 months ago on 06 Dec 2011 9:14 #
  7. arif786
    Member

    @sid73

    N who r u again...NO ONE

    Posted 5 months ago on 06 Dec 2011 9:18 #
  8. siddiqi73
    Member

    And I'm also sure that SMQ does not agree with ISI Khan's stance on NS and PML (N). SMQ would never bad mouth NS, much to the dismay of IK.

    Posted 5 months ago on 06 Dec 2011 9:18 #
  9. Sulaiman Dar
    Member

    I guess there will soon be two factions in the inqilabi tahreek:

    PTI(IK) and PTI(SMQ) :D

    Posted 5 months ago on 06 Dec 2011 9:22 #
  10. siddiqi73
    Member

    And most of the kachra which has just joined the Geek Tehreek would eventually be part of PTI (Haqiqui - SMQ)...hehehehehehe

    Posted 5 months ago on 06 Dec 2011 9:24 #
  11. scandinavian
    Member

    Noon-goons need to understand that within the party there can be different views to some extent. So SMQ can still be in the party and still refrain from bad mouthing the bad!

    Posted 5 months ago on 06 Dec 2011 9:44 #
  12. cutenice62
    Member

    Janab heavyweight woo Pakistan Politics may hai PTI may abhi SHAH g ko apni jaga banani hai....agar SMQ ki waja say PTI k poranay load nikal gayee tu IK itna bhi chota bacha nahi hai k woo nazriyati toar pay shikasat ka bandoobasat khud karay...

    Posted 5 months ago on 06 Dec 2011 10:11 #

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