Imran, Altaf, PIA and Pakistan Politics

Posted on June 15, 2007
Filed Under >Adil Najam, People, Politics
115 Comments
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Adil Najam

Flying in from London to Islamabad, I bumped into Imran Khan on the plane. There he was, sitting a couple of rows ahead of me, reading The News, with his own picture on its front page (meeting Nawaz Sharif in London). I had not yet seen the paper, nor followed that days events in London (I was flying in from Amsterdam where I had been in meetings all day). We exchanged a few pleasantries, said nice things about what we had been up to since we had last met in Chicago just about a year ago (I had reported in detail on that here).

I must say, I did not fully grasp everything he said until later after I landed in Islamabad and first saw his supporters and TV cameras lined up at the airport, and then every news channel covering his press conference in London, and its political implications. In our short conversation he pretty much covered the exact same points I saw him presenting on TV,with pretty much the same passion. I guess he had come fresh from the press conference. Since all of that is now in the news already, I will not repeat it. The one thing I did ask him about were rumors about his ‘patch up’ with the MQM leading to the lifting of the ban on his entry into Sindh. Readers would remember those rumors surfacing everywhere, including on ATP, a few days ago. He shrugged those away as nonsense and just rumors.

My own sense from this very brief discussion chat was that:

(a) he does seem very serious abut taking on MQM Chief Altaf Hussain,
(b) that he fully realizes the seriousness of what he is doing, and
(c) he seems to be doing this out of personal conviction much more than political opportunism.

I may turn out to be wrong, but my first impression was that the earnestness with which he spoke about what he was doing and why that cannot be easily faked. This, then, seems not to be a story that will fizzle away easily. Not if Imran can help it.

If this is, in fact, so then Pakistan politics will continue to become even more interesting than it already is. ‘Party’ politics may just come back into limelight, but not ways one had expected. If indeed there are to be elections in Pakistan soon then the impact of this tussle could go well beyond defining what happens to just Imran Khan and the MQM.

By the way, as it turned out it was an interesting PIA fight to be on. Interior Minister Aftab Sherpao boarded soon after me. As did Commerce Minister Humayun Akhtar Khan (returning, I believe from the WTO meeting in Geneva). They both greeted Imran graciously, and briefly, and then then nearly all of us made the best of the overnight flight by going off to sleep. Of course, I first watched the ‘Tribute to a Legend’ show on Pakistani filmstar Muhammad Ali on the PIA channel.

P.S. In case you wonder, no, I did not speak to either of the Ministers. I do not know either of them, and would not have known what to say anyhow, especially if either of them had seen my own most recent musings on the political happenings in Pakistan.

115 responses to “Imran, Altaf, PIA and Pakistan Politics”

  1. Sohail says:

    Thanks Kruman, MB for providing the links…though being away from home, ‘heard’ Mere Mutabiq yesterday night live on the phone.

    An interesting exercise would now be to watch Sharifs, Benazir, Altaf, Musharraf, Kazi Hussain, Fazl-ur-Rehman and others and Imran in such live programs and then ask oneself as a voter this question;

    Who from the current leadership should represent ”ME”.

    To ‘ME’ the only one who is at ease ‘in domestic as well as foreign affairs…at home as well as abroad…in suit as well as shalwar-qamiz…in urdu as well as english…with dost as well as with dushman,’ and at ease with himself, not pretending, talking with conviction and knowledge of the subject and commanding respect and above all, under the current situation able to represent, talk to and be listened by the broad spectrum of Pakistani Society is………not so difficult to answer!!

    The missing part astonishingly, in the answer are the ‘good people’,’the silent majority’, ‘the pragmatic’ waiting for the ‘right moment’ to come, when they could stand up and be counted on the right side of history…..
    Not knowing that as in life, so in politics (as James Carville would say): It is the timing, stupid!

    P.S. Adil put his work on Faiz a year ago whose timing seems to have become very very relevant now.

  2. MB says:

    In his interview ,IMRAN has come up with a differentiation between the original Taliban & the later Fanatics who took over taliban. This was something new for me.

    Does anyone have any info on this

  3. Saim's Blog says:

    I think Imran khan is right in his stance against military dictatorship & violence in politics.We need politicians like him to come forward.

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