Contact us

Showing posts with label Nawaz Sharif. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nawaz Sharif. Show all posts
5424a65f4b629

UNITED NATIONS: Pakistan and India had two exploratory meetings on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly on Thursday but discussed issues which did not focus on bilateral relations.

Indian Minister for External Affairs Sushma Swaraj and Pakistan’s National Security and Foreign Affairs Adviser Sartaj Aziz came face to face at the Saarc and Commonwealth foreign ministers’ meetings, raising hopes that the two seasoned politicians could use these opportunities for reducing tensions between their nations.

They met as planned, and also had “a brief chit-chat” at the Commonwealth meeting, but did not hold formal talks. Diplomatic observers at the United Nations, however, see even this minor gesture as “a step in the right direction”, as one of them said.

Know more: No plans for Nawaz-Modi meeting in New York: FO

Foreign ministers from Saarc and Commonwealth nations meet every year on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly to discuss a mutually agreed agenda. This year’s agenda included Commonwealth reforms, the post-2015 development goals and improving cooperation within South Asia.

Both Ms Swaraj and Mr Aziz focused on the agenda in their speeches and did meet each other briefly but only to exchange formal greetings.

Speculations about a separate meeting between the two ministers got a boost earlier this week when India’s permanent representative to the UN Asoke Mukerji told the Indian news agency (PTI) that they might “meet” each other at one of these fora.

“There is a meeting of Saarc Foreign Ministers which is scheduled and I am sure our External Affairs Minister will meet” Aziz in the meeting, Mr Mukerji said in response to a question about the possibility of a meeting between them.

Mr Mukerji said the “second opportunity” for the two leaders to meet would be the Commonwealth Foreign Ministers’ meeting.

“India and Pakistan are both members of the Commonwealth. So the two ministers will be meeting in that format as well,” he said. Ms Swaraj last met Mr Aziz on Sept 12 at the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation Summit in Dushanbe but like New York, they only exchanged pleasantries during a break.

The UN General Assembly created another opportunity for India-Pakistan talks as Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and his Indian counterpart Narendra Modi are both attending the session. But officials on both sides have said that there will be no meeting between the two leaders, which led observers to speculate that Ms Swaraj and Mr Aziz could do the talking on their behalf.

India and Pakistan have been involved in a war of words after New Delhi cancelled a Foreign Secretary-level meeting last month after Pakistan’s envoy in India met Kashmiri leaders ahead of the talks.

The Indians say that the resumption of talks depends on Pakistan’s policy towards Kashmir. Indian think-tank experts and former diplomats close to the ruling BJP say that if Mr Sharif raised the Kashmir issue in his address to the General Assembly on Friday, India will show no desire to resume the talks.

They argue that by omitting Kashmir from his speech, Mr Sharif can not only reduce tensions but can also raise the possibility of a meeting with Mr Modi, perhaps even during this UN General Assembly.

The Pakistanis, however, argue that Mr Sharif will commit a political suicide if he did so.
Prime Minister after buying 4 luxury armored cars, 2 BMWs and 2 #mercedes  #Benz   for himself has now cleared the purchase of a 2400cc Mercedes Benz E-250 for the #Attorney   #General   of Pakistan Salman Butt, amid a #political  #crisis   and a weak #economic   growth. It must be noted that AGP Salman Butt is Mr Sharif's 'personal favourite'. He has represented him and his family in numerous corruption #cases   and had him acquitted, latest of which concluded on 19th of September in which the Sharif family was acquitted in cases related to#money   #laundering   and #Hudaibiya   #mills   case.


>>Read More.. 
http://www.dawn.com/news/1134245/
WireAP_63da73ee54cf478ca5fde474835a90d2_16x9_992

Pakistani police arrested anti-government protesters in what activists said was an effort to crack down on weekslong sit-ins in the capital, while the government said police only apprehended suspects in a recent attack on state-run TV.

The party of famed cricketer-turned politician Imran Khan, who is leading one of two major protests demanding the government’s resignation, said a large number of party activists were detained in overnight raids beginning late Friday in Islamabad and elsewhere. He did not provide an exact number.

“We are suspending talks with the government over these arrests,” party leader Jehanghir Tareen told a news conference.

Anti-government cleric Tahir-ul-Qadri, who has been leading parallel demonstrations, said police had also detained his supporters, and that he too would be suspending talks over the arrests.

Pakistani news channels had earlier showed several detained supporters of Qadri and Khan arriving at a local court in two prison vans. Khan’s party leaders and dozens of activists briefly clashed with police as they tried to break the locks of the vans to free the detainees.

Police eventually pushed them back, and Islamabad police chief Tahir Alam warned that anyone attacking the police vans would be arrested.

Khan and Qadri arrived in the capital last month in massive convoys that had set out from the eastern city of Lahore. Since then thousands of demonstrators have been camped outside parliament demanding that Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif resign over alleged voting fraud in last year’s election.

The protesters remained peaceful until August 30, when they tried to storm the prime minister’s residence, prompting police to fire tear gas and rubber bullets. Three people were killed in the melee and hundreds more were wounded.

On Sept. 1, the demonstrators stormed Pakistan Television, briefly forcing the channel off the air.

On Saturday, Pakistan’s Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar Khan said police arrested only those involved in the attack on Pakistan Television and other government buildings. He urged Khan and Qadri to continue negotiating an end to the standoff.

Khan and Qadri have said they will not end their protests until Sharif resigns. Pakistan’s parliament unanimously rejected their “unconstitutional demand” after Khan’s party, the third largest political bloc, quit the assembly.

Sharif was forced from office after a previous stint as prime minister in 1999, when the then-army chief Pervez Musharraf seized power in a coup.

Elsewhere in Pakistan, a powerful car bomb exploded in a bazaar in the southwest, killing at least three people and wounding 24 others, police said.

Senior police officer Abdur Razzak Cheema said the attack took place when a vehicle carrying security forces was passing through the market in Quetta, the capital of southwestern Baluchistan province.

The dead included a paramilitary soldier and two civilians, he said.

Baluchistan is Pakistan’s largest province and has been the scene of a low-scale insurgency for several years.

Separatists in the region are pressing the federal government to more equitably share the revenues from gas and oil extracted from the province.

Also Saturday, the head of a branch of the Pakistani Taliban said his group would give up armed struggle in favor of a preaching campaign to push for the imposition of Islamic law in the country.

Ismatullah Muawia, who heads the local Punjab chapter of the Pakistani Taliban, said in a video message that the group came to its decision after consulting with religious scholars. In Afghanistan however, it would continue to fight foreign forces operating there.

The move was the latest blow to the Pakistani Taliban, which last month saw several factions leave the organization to form a splinter group.
267366-qadri

Signs of a possible solution to end the political crisis engulfing Pakistan looked bleak on saturday as anti-government protest leaders suspended talks with theNawaz Sharif government following a crackdown on demonstrators with opposition leader Imran Khan asserting that there was no room for negotiations any more.

Pakistani police arrested several dozens of anti-government protestors and a court ordered that 100 opposition activists be sent to jail for holding illegal protests and other violations, triggering tense confrontation between demonstrators and police in the centre of the capital.

Addressing his supporters on the completion of one month of protest, the fiery Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf chief announced to continue protests in front of Parliament till Sharif stepped down.

“There is no room for negotiations any more. We will not leave till the premier resigns,” Khan said.

He questioned Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif if it is democratic to arrest young workers. “Officials putting young people behind bars should be ashamed of themselves. It is our democratic right to protest peacefully,” he said.

“Sharif’s real face has been unveiled, he is a dictator and his rule is worse than GeneralPervez Musharraf’s rule,” Khan said.

“We cannot rely on the police or judiciary anymore,” the PTI chief said as police yesterday arrested several dozens of protestors from the capital accusing them for violating section 144 which prohibit a gathering of five or more people in Islamabad.

He said that his dream of “Naya Pakistan” would soon come true and promised to introduce transparent government system in the country after ousting the present government. Pakistan Awami Tehreek (PAT) chief and populist cleric Tahir-ul Qadri, who has been leading parallel demonstrations, also said that he has suspended talks with the PML-N government following a crackdown here on demonstrators demanding ouster of Sharif.

“We have suspended the talks as the government has begun arresting my workers in Islamabad and around the country,” Qadri said, deepening the month-long political impasse in the country.

“The government was unwilling to hear out the legitimate grievances of people who had been camped outside the halls of power for a month now,” Qadri was quoted as saying by Dawn.

Khan also dismissed the impression that he was supported by the military, saying “I don’t need the Pakistan Army, as I already have an army of the people of Pakistan”.

Khan’s PTI wants Sharif’s ouster over alleged rigging in last year’s poll which his party lost, while Qadri wants to bring a revolution in the country.

Both leaders have been agitating since mid-August 14. At least three people have been killed and over 550 injured in violence during the protests.
234143_38320005

Pakistan on Thursday denied any presence of supporters of the Islamic State (IS) Sunni extremist group in the country and reiterated that it is against terrorism in all its forms and manifestations.

No government source has confirmed presence of the IS supporters in the country, said foreign ministry spokesperson Tasnim Aslam, reported Xinhua.

Aslam was responding to questions concerning statements of some Pakistani clerics that alleged that recent attacks in Karachi showed that there have been some IS foot print in Pakistan.

The attack on the Karachi Dockyard Sep 6 was the fourth big Taliban attack since the launch of the North Waziristan offensive.

The military operation ‘Zarb-i-Azb’ was launched by the Pakistan army June 15 following a brazen militant attack on Karachi’s international airport and failure of peace talks between the government and Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) negotiators.

Aslam, however, evaded a direct reply to whether the US has sought Pakistan’s help in the fight against the IS.

“We are determined to take action without any discrimination,” the spokesperson said.

Some unidentified people had distributed IS pamphlets and flags in parts of northwest Pakistan and Afghan refugee camps this month, seeking support for the Sunni militant group.

The pamphlets titled ‘Fatah’ (victory) were published in Pashto and Dari languages and distributed in Peshawar, the capital of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.
john-kerry_3035718b

Saudi Arabia among 10 Arab states which agree to join Barack Obama’s “international coalition” against Isil, after ministers hold talks with John Kerry





A coalition of 10 Arab states threw their support behind Barack Obama’s pledge to destroy the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (Isil) movement in Iraq and Syria on Thursday.



In a welcome boost to US plans for defeating the militant Islamist group, regional powers including Saudi Arabia and Jordan pledged to “do their share” in the battle.



The announcement in Saudi Arabia was carefully choreographed, coming hours after the president told the American people that he would expand US air strikes against the militants, promising that Isil would ultimately be “vanquished from the Earth”.



As Mr Obama marked the anniversary of the September 11 attacks with a moment of silence at the White House, the 10 regional allies — which also included Bahrain, Egypt, Iraq, Kuwait, Lebanon, Oman, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates — issued their statement after a meeting in Jeddah with John Kerry, the US secretary of state.



They promised that they would join in “the comprehensive fight” against Isil, including choking off funds and fighters to the group.




Officials in Turkey, which was also represented and could play a vital role in stopping fighters, arms and finance crossing the porous border with Syria, said they would not allow offensive operations to be launched from their territory, including the major US base in southern Turkey at Incirlik.

Mr Kerry is due to arrive in Ankara, the Turkish capital, on Friday as part of a diplomatic effort to strengthen the resolve of the country, 46 citizens of which are being held hostage by the militants.

At the same time, Russia and Iran, who had silently aligned with the US in demanding that Iraq’s divisive former prime minister, Nouri al-Maliki, stand aside, both criticised Mr Obama’s decision to expand the US air campaign to include targets in Syria.

A Russian foreign ministry spokesman said any strikes on Syrian territory without UN authorisation would be an “act of aggression, a gross violation of international law”.

Mr Kerry shrugged off the Russian complaint as laughable, adding he was surprised that Russia would “dare to assert any notion of international law” after recent events in Crimea and Ukraine.

Mr Obama laid out a four-point strategy to “degrade and ultimately destroy” Isil in which an expanded US air campaign, aided by nearly 1,000 US military advisers on the ground, would enable local Iraqi and Syrian rebel forces to “go on the offence” against the militants.

“American power can make a decisive difference, but we cannot do for Iraqis what they must do for themselves, nor can we take the place of Arab partners in securing their region,” the president said in a prime-time televised address from the White House.

Officials said that Saudi Arabia will host training camps for up to 10,000 “moderate” Syrian rebel fighters who Obama administration officials ultimately hope will hold any territory reclaimed with the aid of US air power.

The Saudi decision to ally openly with the US in the fight against Sunni militants has revived fears over the terrorist threat to the kingdom, the spiritual heart of the Muslim world. Analysts also warned that many questions remained over the practicality of Mr Obama’s plan to bolster the rebel fighters — an idea about which he was openly sceptical only two months ago, dismissing it as a “fantasy”.

Frederic Hof, a former special adviser to the Obama administration on Syria and now senior fellow at the Rafik Hariri Centre for the Middle East, said it remained unclear if Mr Obama was serious about entering the Syrian conflict, rather than engaging in isolated strikes on Isil there.

“For a White House accustomed to micromanagement and the managing of messages, this is unfamiliar terrain,” he warned. “The coalition will need constant tending: it contains oarsmen not accustomed to pulling in the same direction.”

Theodore Karasik, research director of the Institute for Near East and Gulf Military Analysis in Dubai, warned that Saudi leaders would react badly to any signs of hesitation. “If there is any hint of retreat by the Obama administration, the Saudis will be furious and may take matters in to their own hands.”

Saudi Arabia’s request for American troops to defend the kingdom against Saddam Hussein after the invasion of Kuwait in 1990 was the original cause cited by Osama bin Laden for his war on his homeland and on the West.


754243-pervezmusharrafREUTERS-1409114327-504-640x480

Former military ruler Pervez Musharraf ruled out the possibility of anyone hurting Pakistan in the presence of the army which is fully capable of giving a befitting response to any adventurism.

“The army will thwart all challenges to Pakistan’s territorial integrity,” he told the anchor of a private TV channel.

Musharraf said no country, including the United States, should bother to interfere in Pakistan’s internal affairs as Pakistanis knew how to solve their problems.

But the former president conceded that there was a growing sense of unease over the current political stalemate. The crisis, according to Musharraf, should be resolved in a peaceful manner.

He said the army was closely monitoring the whole situation. “Just like 1999, the people are once again looking at the army for help,” he said.

He disagreed that it was the right time for re-election. “But it is the real democracy that people have come out of their homes,” he added.

Criticising the former chief justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry, he said he had tried to expose him in 2007.

“However, the election commission’s former official Afzal Khan’s statement has unveiled his real character,” he added.

Musharraf claimed that Pakistan’s journey towards development had been had stunted since 2007. He claimed that no one in the country was free from corruption. “However, things will have to be reformed from the top,” he added.
53fa361cd3c28

ISLAMABAD: Former additional secretary of the Election commission of Pakistan Muhammad Afzal Khan has alleged that the general elections in May 2013 were rigged and that the people’s mandate was ‘stolen’.

He said that former chief justices Iftikhar Chaudhry and Tassadduq Jillani were also involved in rigging the vote.

Khan made the allegation during an interview on a private television channel, in which he said that Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif did not win the elections in a free and fair manner.

He said during the interview that the Chief Election Commissioner Justice (retd) Fakhruddin G Ebrahim had shut his eyes on the rigging.

The former additional secretary said that the Election Commission had been put under tremendous pressure during the alleged rigging.

Khan said that judges were also involved in fixing the vote and that hearings of voter fraud was deliberately delayed.

Reacting to the interview, Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf Chairman Imran khan commended Afzal Khan and said that the former additional secretary’s remarks vindicates the stand that he has been taking.

Imran Khan said that Afzal Khan’s statements show that the position for Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif was untenable and again reiterated his demand that the premier resign.

Former Law Minister Rana Sanaullah dismissed Afzal Khan’s remarks and said, “people like this are specially prepared for occasions such as this”.

Sanaullah said that Imran Khan’s protest movement has been a flop and that Afzal Khan like the PTI chief was being used as a pawn.
nawaz_sharif_Taliban_Escape_Afghan_Border_360

Islamabad, Pakistan: Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif on Sunday said there was no justification for the protests as he has accepted all constitutional demands of protesters after opposition leader Imran Khan asked him to quit for 30 days to allow a probe into alleged rigging in the 2013 polls.

“Instead of wasting their energies in protests, the demonstrators should play their role for the progress and development of the country,” Mr Sharif said in his first public comments after Mr Khan sought his resignation.

There is no justification for continuing the protest after the government acceded to all the constitutional demands of the participants of the sit-ins, he said during a meeting with Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif and Member of National Assembly Hamza Shahbaz.

In his latest demand after the government outrightly rejected the proposal to end the crippling political deadlock, Mr Khan asked Mr Sharif to quit for 30 days to allow an independent probe into alleged rigging in last year’s polls.

“We accept nothing less than Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif’s resignation,” Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) chief Imran Khan told his supporters as they continued the siege of the parliament.

With the government rejecting the protesters’ demand that Mr Sharif step down as Prime Minister, the political deadlock entered the 11th day on Sunday with no breakthrough yet.

The third round of talks between government negotiators and Imran Khan-led Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) on Saturday night failed to break the logjam.

The party has announced it will recommence its sit-in on Sunday evening with screens and mini-protests in other cities as well.

After the meeting, Mr Khan’s chief negotiator Shah Mehmood Qureshi told reporters that if proved innocent Nawaz Sharif can return to power.

Meanwhile, 11 disgruntled Members of National Assembly from Mr Khan’s PTI have decided to form a forward bloc after developing serious differences with the party leadership over the issue of resignations.

PTI member Gulzar Khan accused the party leadership of not consulting the lawmakers over the decision of resignations during the sit-in in Islamabad, Geo TV reported.

He said that they were neither consulted nor taken on board over such a big decision.

Thousands of supporters of cricketer-turned-politician Imran Khan and firebrand cleric Tahir-ul Qadri continued to camp outside the Parliament building in Islamabad.

Pakistani media said government has suspended mobile phone services in the Red Zone, in and around the National Assembly citing security reasons. There are also reports of fresh efforts to block arterial roads leading to the protest site to prevent supporters of Mr Khan and Mr Qadri reaching there.

Striking a defiant note, Mr Khan said it was out of question to leave the capital without forcing Mr Sharif to quit.

“If it is proved after 30 days that everything was ok, you can return as the PM. But you are not willing to take us up on the offer. That is because you are afraid that you will be found out,” Mr Khan said.

Using the cricketing terminology, he promised to contest till the “last ball”.

Meanwhile, Punjab Chief Minister and the premier’s brother Shahbaz Sharif denied reports that the Pakistan Muslim League – Nawaz (PML-N) government was considering his resignation as a means to end the political crisis.

Punjab Law Minister Rana Mashhood categorically rejected the reports that the option of Shahbaz Sharif’s resignation was under consideration, Dawn news reported.

On Saturday, embattled Premier Nawaz Sharif received a boost when former President Asif Ali Zardari met him at his residence in Lahore to discuss the crisis and pledged to “protect democracy”.

Jamaat-i-Islami Chief Sirajul Haq said that the resignations submitted by the PTI lawmakers should not be accepted, otherwise the current political crisis will escalate.

Speaking to the media after a meeting with National Assembly Speaker Sardar Ayaz Sadiq, Mr Haq said that there was still room for talks.
Hundreds_of_thousands_of_Bahrainis_taking_part_in_march_of_loyalty_to_martyrs

Make history, don’t become one




Let’s forget about who is right wrong and who is wrong. No judgments, no prejudice against anyone. Let’s concentrate on only two questions: How can this situation be resolved amicably; and why it is necessary to do it as soon as possible?

Are the demands legitimate? Is the modus operandi adopted for this purpose constitutional? Are there 7,000 people present at D Chowk or does the number of assembling people runs into hundreds of thousands in the evenings? These and such other questions seem to have lost their relevance at the moment. The only relevant concern of the people seems to be that we are at the brink and we must address the situation on ground as soon and as realistically as is possible.

How can the Gordian knot be made loose? It’s simple through give and take by the opposing parties. Everyone is telling that. But what can that ‘give and take’ be? That’s easier said than explained. But even then, there are literally more than one ways for the parties involved to reach some mutually agreed solution.

Consider.

Government and PTI agree on, 1) the formation of the electoral reforms committee, headed by Imran Khan, to give recommendations in a reasonable time period to be approved by the parliament and made part of the constitution; 2) term of elected government is brought down from five to four years, to avoid impatience in future, and provide an opportunity to the system to achieve some semblance of stability; 3) making local bodies’ elections part and parcel of the democratic system that can’t be constitutionally and legally avoided; 4) it is agreed that no one in future will be doled out lucrative assignments on the basis of his/her relationship with the democratically elected rulers/representatives; 5) as 2014 is nearing its end, 2015 is earmarked for the proposed reforms (electoral, election commission, caretaker government, and governance-related, etc.), and it is agreed that elections will be held before the end of that year or sometime in during the first quarter of 2016 to pave the way for a constitutional change; 6) and last, but not the least, agreeing on some mechanism for protests by all sides (and sparing Islamabad and important venues in other big cities to be used) for long marches and dharnas for the purpose of an otherwise illegal or whimsical overthrow of democratically elected governments in future.

But why should a breakthrough be made sooner than soon? It is because: a) first, the agitating parties failed to bring the promised/expected number of people to the venue and now they are fast reaching a point where even the initial number and zeal of the supporters may become difficult to maintain; b) these factors are leading the two big protesting leaders to desperation which can result in some potentially dangerous decisions; c) some third party can take advantage of the situation to create chaotic conditions in the country and make it unstable politically; d) if the talks prolonged for an indefinite period – apparently with good prospects of success – some important leader among these parties can be physically harmed that will eventually lead to a widespread bloodshed and ultimately the fall of the system; and, e) the apparent breakdown of the government machinery and an unending political stalemate can suck in the all-powerful military establishment which will obviously be the derailment of the democratic process that is in vogue for the past six years.

Both the government and the protesting parties carry equal responsibility to save the system from total collapse. But since Qadri and Chauhdry brothers are nothing more than political nuisance, therefore the main responsibility for anything untoward will largely rest with Imran Khan and the government. Rather, it will be mainly IK who will be held responsible tomorrow if the current democratic system gets derailed today.

Why?

Why should IK show more flexibility in the prevailing deadlock? It is because there are more personal and political damages for him to suffer in case things go wrong. On personal level he will be considered a non-serious leader who cannot be relied upon in future; he will be blamed for damaging democracy; he will prove to be one of the same – a leader who couldn’t rise above his personal interests for the sake of democracy and his country; and he will prove himself to be visionless – which is nothing less than political death for a prospective leader.

There are other reasons as well for IK as a leader and PTI as a party which demand a more careful and responsible behaviour. Leading democracy and the country into a blind alley will have its price which PTI along with other stakeholders will be liable to pay. At the moment there are no powerful arguments with the party to convince majority of the countrymen why it has opted for such brinkmanship and why it can’t resolve this political crisis through dialogue. The excuse of delay on the part of the government in responding to PTI’s demands and grievances regarding electoral rigging is already not going well even with political analysts extremely critical of the PML-N government and its leaders’ governing style. Same is true about IK’s demand of PM’s resignation and mid-term polls, which are commonly considered childish.

Both the government and the protesting parties carry equal responsibility to save the system from total collapse. But since Qadri and Chauhdry brothers are nothing more than political nuisance, therefore the main responsibility for anything untoward will largely rest with Imran Khan and the government. Rather, it will be mainly IK who will be held responsible tomorrow if the current democratic system gets derailed today.

Analysts are apprehensive that if Imran Khan didn’t mend his ways soon, it will be hard for him to offload the political baggage he is heaping upon his young political party’s shoulders at the moment. It is also a fact that PTI, due to its isolationist approach and apolitical behaviour already stands isolated. Prolongation of the dharna is turning that isolation to antagonism with the rest of the political parties operating in the country. This is mainly due to the impractical and non-political demands of its leadership plus the derogatory language it has been using against the leaders of almost all of the rest of the political parties; excluding itself. Such an approach is normally adopted by revolutionary parties and groups but only when the overall environment is conducive for achieving its stated political objectives. Here, not only that mass support is found divided and lacking but also that the objectives remain unclear. The only thing most of the participants of the million march are clear about is ‘change’; the rest is shrouded in mystery and is generally camouflaged in the ‘unmatched determination’ of the Kaptaan.

But leaving aside personal and political ramifications for IK and his party, the long-term consequences for the system also seem to be negative as all the PTI roads lead only to one unhappy destination. There are many scenarios (all with same results) likely to develop in case IK sticks to his demands, PTI does not budge, the gridlock continues or even the ‘Changians’ and Revolutionaries succeed in achieving their goals. These can include:

i)                    Prime Minister resigns, government overthrown and federal and provincial assemblies dissolved (all unlikely but let’s assume). So a legal vacuum is created where nothing lawful exist to ensure a legitimate transition to the next phase.

ii)                  PM refuses to resign, the army intervenes and compels the warring parties to agree to some undesirable solution under duress.

iii)                Stalemate persists, some untoward occurring takes place and bloodshed ensues which compels the army to intervene.

iv)                No solution is found and military is sucked in, politicians are sidelined and a ‘neutral’, ‘non-political’ interim government is installed for an extended period of time to overhaul and revamp the electoral and governance system as demanded by the politicians themselves and which has brought the country to that deadlock in the first place.

v)                  Finding all other options closed, the military intervenes directly, pointing to the ‘performance’ of the political class, asks for the verdict of the people in a generalized or specific way, and moves ahead with an agenda and programme of its own.

All these hypothetical scenarios have one thing in common: derailment of the current democratic system and subversion of the constitution – whether in a big or small way. And whether the army actually helped in painting the situation into this blind corner or not, these will largely be politicians, especially IK and NS, who will be blamed for rocking the loolly, langdhi democratic boat. This certainly will not be a position any politician worth his/her salt would like to be put into. Tahirul Qadri is not a politician. He has no stakes in the system neither is he likely to have some in the foreseeable future. Nor will he matter much if IK reaches a workable agreement with the government (though there seem brighter prospects of some kind of a deal between him and the government). Forget about the exaggerated noise he will be making for some time, his inqilab balloon will deflate just like that once IK comes in the loop with the rest of the stakeholders for the sake of the system.

It, of course, is the government which can allure the maverick to join the mainstream by accepting his lawful demands and addressing his legitimate grievances. But much depends on Imran Khan now to realise that he has gone too far and that he ought to return to join the caravan of democracy and do his bit to improve the system while remaining in the confines of the constitution. Those who are busy making him believe that any flexibility on his part now will ‘bury his politics in the grave dug for Metro Bus’ are in fact scaring him away of finding a political solution to a basically political problem. They are not his friends; they simply want to use his political clout and strength to serve their own purposes. But even then, there should be no problem for a leader like Imran Khan to say he is ready to do that if the choice is between burying his own political career and the long-term interest of the country he wants to change for good.

After all, if the erring one comes home before dark, he can’t be termed a wayward. Come back, Captain. You have already played a remarkable role to make life difficult for those who will even think of stealing the mandate of the people in future. And you have a much bigger role to play in future. Don’t let yourself get mired in the moment which is going to pass anyway. Don’t drown yourself in the ocean of your ego and take away the hope of a better Pakistan the future generation has pinned on you and your party. Make history, don’t become one.