Imran Khan, me and democracy

Posted on July 10, 2006
Filed Under >Adil Najam, People, Politics
43 Comments
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Adil Najam

This Friday and Saturday I was in Chicago to speak at two different events that were part of the Annual APPNA Convention (APPNA is the Association of Physicians of Pakistani Descent in North America). On Friday my talk was about the future challenges related to the 2005 earthquake.

On Saturday, however, I was part of a 2-person panel on ‘Building Democratic Institutions in Pakistan,’ organized by the Pak-American Democracy Dialogue (PADD). The other featured speaker on the panel was former cricketer and now head of Tehrik-e-Insaaf, Imran Khan. I guess, to be honest, I (and not Imran) was the ‘other’ person.

What I had to say during my presentation and the hour-long Q&A session was of little significance (and not very different from what I have published elsewhere or written on ATP). But what Imran said should be of interest to many; and since you won’t find a report on this anywhere else, I guess we can say that this is an ATP Exclusive!

But before reporting on what he said, let me just say a few words about my impression of him based on this two-and-a-half hour interaction. As always, he came across as extremely passionate, clearly sincere, and quite principled. He also came across as rather angry but also determined. The first time I had met him was in the late 1980s; he was then a cricketing god, and I a sports reporter for the now defunct Daily Muslim. At that point, and in some subsequent meetings, he did come across as rather arrogant. I must confess that this time he did not seem arrogant. The characteristic self-confidence, charisma and an uncompromising posture was still there. But there was also an odd Imran-like humility. Maybe age combined with accumulated political experience of failure can do that people. Over all, I must confess, I came out being more impressed than I had thought I would be. I also surprised myself by agreeing with him more often (though not always) than I thought I would.

So, here are a few things he had to say–you will note that a number of these are interesting predictions and things we have not heard him saying before (these are based on the notes I took, and may not always be exact quotations)

On his relationship with Gen. Musharraf. I now realize that our good relationship in the beginning was based on two wrong assumptions. He assumed, wrongly, that I wanted to be Prime Minister. And I assumed, wrongly, that he was a genuine reformer.

On politics in Pakistan. You have to realize that what we have in Pakistan is not just feudal politics, but ‘political terrorism.’ People are not forced but coerced into voting a particular way, through the most violent means.

On the ‘English Medium’ class: It is sad and ironic that the very people on whom we spend the largest amount of the nation’s educational resources–the ‘English Medium Class’–are the most deculturalized from the essence of Pakistan and the most depoliticized from the politics of Pakistan. They are the first to pontificate on what is wrong with politics and democracy, but the very last to vote. In fact, they usually do not vote at all.

On the next elections. We are approaching one of the most exciting phase of our country’s political history. You will see mass movements starting in September. And the next elections–if they are held–will either be like the 1970 elections or like the 1977 elections. Either, they will witness a total change of faces and everyone, including the authorities, will be surprised. Or, they will be so transparently manipulated that people will come to the streets to overturn the results.

43 responses to “Imran Khan, me and democracy”

  1. sabizak says:

    I so agree with Sharmeen. His views on women are atrocious and if he keeps insisting on them he won’t have any sensible women coming forward and popularizing his campaign and that could meaning losing out on a sizable vote bank (assuming we think there are lots of sensible women in Pakistan)

  2. Naveed says:

    i agree with Sharmeen. ambivalence towards womens rights and identity issues as someone highlighted earlier are IK’s weakest points

    due to the the political vacuum created by the President, popular sentiment is being dictated by fringe elements, right of centre parties so imran khan starts making sense, a voice of reason if you will…..

    i wish imran has stayed out of politics & concentrated & expanded Shaukat Khanum Hospital etc. and put more focus on public service on the lines of maulana edhi

  3. iFaqeer says:

    Quick note: When I heard my first political interview of IK, I was impressed. Complete with the “Government should get out of the way”.

    But I listened to him at OPEN Forum here in SV last year. My take now is that he now gets the problem; the fact that we have a disconnect between our left brain and our right brain, so to speak. But who he is prevents him from being part of the solution. He cannot bring himself to admit that the “ghareebs”, the non-English Medium crowd might have something of vital importance to bring to the table. As in without accepting “they” have insight, skills and experience, that are AS IMPORTANT as those IK, I, and AN might have, without which IK, I, and AN and all of the rest of us are doomed to continue in failure mode if we don’t start treating the “ghareeb”s as equals.

    Shoot me when he becomes Ameer-ul-Momineen, but that’s my take on the matter.

    PS: And if there’s a real campaign he’s leading, please sign me up; it should be fun, at least as a party. I can’t seem to get a straight reply from the TI website.

  4. Sharmeen says:

    Adil, i have always admired Imran Khan but a few years ago i read a piece he had written about the role of women in society for Dawn and i cant look at him in the same light ever since!
    In his opinion Pakistani women have certain roles to play in society and that our first priority should be our home and our families and that we must not try to emulate women in the west by getting jobs etc…
    The man has double standards, he is a play boy who has liasons with women all over the world but as a politician he wants to be politically correct, a good muslim….
    I admire his dedication to Shaukat Khanum but im not so sure about his politics…

  5. Jay says:

    Bilal you are right, IK has a long road ahead of him. No one can say he is some great politician today or that he has the support to get something accomplished…but I think with time he will get support, he will learn how to manuver around the political/military machinery and actually do some good. It be great if he could actually do some great things for his district (according to IK 70% of its kids dont go to school) if he could just improve those kids lives he has done alot!
    If we all just improved just one persons life…PK will be a world-beater!

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