How it went wrong for Nawaz Sharif

Aye taaer e Lahooti us rizq say mout achi…

BBC News - How it went wrong for Nawaz Sharif

Pakistan’s problems are mounting and Nawaz Sharif’s government appears paralysed, just over three months after he swept to election victory on a tide of optimism, reports guest columnist Ahmed Rashid. Where did it go wrong?

When Mr Sharif became prime minister, public expectations were sky high that he would quickly get to grips with Pakistan’s most pressing problems - rampant terrorism, multiple insurgencies, an economy in free fall, the lack of electricity and a debilitating foreign policy.

Instead, Mr Sharif has stumbled badly, incurring widespread public anger as terrorism intensifies, the economy worsens and his government appears unable even to fill dozens of critically needed appointments such as senior bureaucratic positions, public corporation chiefs or ambassadors for key posts such as Washington and London.

Moreover, the hope that dialogue with the army would create a civil-military partnership, putting the army and an elected government on the same page for the first time in Pakistan’s history, has so far yielded few results.

After weeks of conferring with politicians, experts and the army, Mr Sharif announced his policy to counter the Pakistani Taliban on 9 September which all the political parties endorsed - but most experts and the army rejected. The government announced that it would open unconditional talks with the Taliban, declaring them stakeholders rather than terrorists and a government-run All Parties Conference blamed the US and Nato for causing terrorism in Pakistan.

The Taliban issued a list of more than 30 demands, including the imposition of Sharia (Islamic law) and the military’s withdrawal from the tribal regions. On 15 September Maj Gen Sanaullah Khan Niazi and a colonel were killed in a devastating bomb blast in the far north-west of the country for which the Taliban took responsibility. That day seven soldiers were killed in four separate attacks.

**Army chief Gen Pervez Kayani, who had earlier warned Mr Sharif not to adopt a surrender strategy, now publicly warned the government that the army would not allow the Taliban to set conditions for peace. “No-one should have any misgivings that we would let terrorists coerce us into accepting their terms,” he said.
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**Then on Sunday more than 80 people were killed and some 130 wounded in suicide bombings in a church in Peshawar. The attack also left the Sharif initiative in tatters.
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**On his way to the United Nations to try to impress Western nations with his plan, he had to make radical adjustments as he reached London, saying for the first time that maybe talks with the Taliban were not such a good idea after all.
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**But where exactly he goes from here is unclear even to his closest aides.
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**Experts had told him that a comprehensive counter-terrorism strategy could include the tactical option of talks, but must also include the use of force, economic development and other measures.
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**Now the Taliban are likely to step up their attacks as they see the government as weak, floundering and scared.
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**The same directionless, slow-moving process has followed Mr Sharif’s stillborn promise to start a dialogue with separatist rebels in Balochistan province. **He has had better luck in dealing with the ever worsening crisis in Karachi where armed gangs are holding the port city hostage. A crackdown led by paramilitary forces is under way but has still to yield results.

The army and Nawaz Sharif also do not see eye to eye on how fast to improve relations with India. Mr Sharif reached out to India in June, but Delhi has insisted that he should deliver on at least one of three issues - reciprocating with Most Favoured Nation status to enhance trade as India has already done for Pakistan, speed up the trial of seven Lashkar-e-Taiba militants accused of involvement in the 2008 Mumbai massacre and clamp down on Lashkar-e-Taiba and its leader, Hafiz Saeed.

India’s condition-based talks did not carry much weight with the Pakistani army, which wants India to restart a full dialogue with Pakistan on contentious issues like Kashmir. The army told Nawaz Sharif he was moving too fast with India and stalled acting on any of the three options.

Moreover, after a 10-year hiatus there has been repeated firing between Indian and Pakistani forces along the Line of Control in Kashmir, killing a dozen soldiers and civilians on both sides this year.

Hafiz Saeed, who has remained under tight control by the intelligence agencies, was allowed to lead a large anti-India rally in the capital, Islamabad, in early September.

However, after much hesitation Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has agreed to meet Nawaz Sharif at the UN in New York, although Indian Foreign Minister Salman Khurshid has insisted that “we need some satisfaction, we need some deliverables”.

The increased militant violence has led to further paralysis of Pakistan’s economy. **The rupee is declining by about 2.5% a month, inflation is rising and industry shut down by either militancy or power cuts has yet to restart. GDP growth is less than 3% while the fiscal deficit is nearly 9%.

The government has taken a $6.7bn (£4.2bn) loan from the IMF - most of it will be used to pay back a previous IMF loan - but so far Islamabad has failed to implement the very low level of economic reforms that the IMF has demanded. Failure to do so will further delay the release of funds and prevent investment into the economy.**

Restarting investment and the economy requires tough decisions and reforms that Nawaz Sharif has so far showed no signs of making. To do so requires zero tolerance for terrorism, which has to be the goal if Pakistan is to survive and overcome the threats posed by extremists.

Re: How it went wrong for Nawaz Sharif

nothing happened to nawaz sharif , he is doing all he can , he didnt said that everything will be like heaven in 3 months , the work that ppp were unable to do in 5 years cant b done in 3 month for God sake, and those who said in 90 days they will change PAKISTAN are now hiding in cm house kpk , even Imran khan is there every 2nd day, and still nothing good for kpk ... he needs to be criticized for that 90 days thing , not nawaz sharif

Re: How it went wrong for Nawaz Sharif

In other news Hamza Sharif has been given the powers of Chief Minister Punjab.

Hamza to head public affairs body with

LAHORE: The Punjab government has notified Hamza Shahbaz, the son of Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif, as chairman of the six-member Public Affairs Committee with massive powers.

Dr Tauqeer Shah is also a member of the six-member Public Affairs Committee to be headed by Hamza. Though Hamza will not chair the cabinet meeting, virtually he will be deputy chief minister.

According to the notification, Hamza has been authorized toplay his role for improving law and order and keep close liaison with Punjab Assembly members, supervise all matters of the assembly and ensure quorum of members at the sessions.

Through elected representatives, economic, social and construction projects will be supervised. He will issue instructions to district administrations for development and timely completion of new projects.

Hamza will also give recommendations to the chief minister regarding development projects in the province. Hamza Shahbaz will also resolve any differences between public representatives and government officers. He will help provide basic facilities to ordinary citizens and will give his recommendations on summaries forwarded by provincial departments in the Chief Minister House. Hamza will mobilize relevant departments, elected members, civil society and government resources in the wake of natural calamities and other emergencies.

According to the notification, Hamza and the committee will conduct their routine meetings at 9-Club Road, however, they will be also allowed to use the Chief Minister’ office at 90- Shahre-e-Quaid-E-Azam. The relevant authorities have been instructed to provide all required facilities to Hamza and the committee members.

Secretary Implementation of CM House Barrister Nabeel Awan has signed the notification and copies of the notification have been forwarded to the Chief Secretary, IGP Punjab, all provincial secretaries, all divisional commissioners, all regional police officers, all DCOs and DPO’s of Punjab, Secretary Coordination at the CM House, deputy secretaries, chief coordinators of security, all section officers, the CM House’s protocol officers, motor transport, and all other concerned.

Hamza did not respond to repeated calls or messages sent to his cellular phone. A member of the committee, Manshaullah Butt, was also contacted but his secretary Omer told this correspondent that Butt Sahib is in a meeting. Another member of the committee, on the condition of anonymity, said there was nothing as being suggested, adding that they wanted to serve the masses and ensure good governance.

Re: How it went wrong for Nawaz Sharif

In other news Hamza Sharif has been given the powers of Chief Minister Punjab.

Hamza to head public affairs body with

LAHORE: The Punjab government has notified Hamza Shahbaz, the son of Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif, as chairman of the six-member Public Affairs Committee with massive powers.

Dr Tauqeer Shah is also a member of the six-member Public Affairs Committee to be headed by Hamza. Though Hamza will not chair the cabinet meeting, virtually he will be deputy chief minister.

According to the notification, Hamza has been authorized toplay his role for improving law and order and keep close liaison with Punjab Assembly members, supervise all matters of the assembly and ensure quorum of members at the sessions.

Through elected representatives, economic, social and construction projects will be supervised. He will issue instructions to district administrations for development and timely completion of new projects.

Hamza will also give recommendations to the chief minister regarding development projects in the province. Hamza Shahbaz will also resolve any differences between public representatives and government officers. He will help provide basic facilities to ordinary citizens and will give his recommendations on summaries forwarded by provincial departments in the Chief Minister House. Hamza will mobilize relevant departments, elected members, civil society and government resources in the wake of natural calamities and other emergencies.

According to the notification, Hamza and the committee will conduct their routine meetings at 9-Club Road, however, they will be also allowed to use the Chief Minister’ office at 90- Shahre-e-Quaid-E-Azam. The relevant authorities have been instructed to provide all required facilities to Hamza and the committee members.

Secretary Implementation of CM House Barrister Nabeel Awan has signed the notification and copies of the notification have been forwarded to the Chief Secretary, IGP Punjab, all provincial secretaries, all divisional commissioners, all regional police officers, all DCOs and DPO’s of Punjab, Secretary Coordination at the CM House, deputy secretaries, chief coordinators of security, all section officers, the CM House’s protocol officers, motor transport, and all other concerned.

Hamza did not respond to repeated calls or messages sent to his cellular phone. A member of the committee, Manshaullah Butt, was also contacted but his secretary Omer told this correspondent that Butt Sahib is in a meeting. Another member of the committee, on the condition of anonymity, said there was nothing as being suggested, adding that they wanted to serve the masses and ensure good governance.

Re: How it went wrong for Nawaz Sharif

ok sir! Every thing's hunky dory in Pakistan.

Re: How it went wrong for Nawaz Sharif

nah everything is not hunky dory but it on the way to be hunky dory , I think we should talk about this after 2 years, and by praying for NO MARTIAL LAW because army chief is retiring in a month i think , as well as the chief justice , so we need to worry about that, as everytime pakistan is on the right path we get in trouble , weather it was the benazir govt or nawaz sharif, nothing was right in Zardari govt so no body said about martial law, but now again we are going the right way, so rumors are it highest

Re: How it went wrong for Nawaz Sharif

There is no one else in the Punjab Assembly PML-N as smart as Hamza Sharif who can do this job, everyone else is a dumb f@rt, Hamza was born with all the skills needed to carry out such tasks.

Re: How it went wrong for Nawaz Sharif

I've seen people praying for PML-N's gov to fail so it's funny when the compain about all thes failures.

Re: How it went wrong for Nawaz Sharif

Are you sure you have seen SAME people praying for PML-N failure who are now "complaining" of failure? :)

Re: How it went wrong for Nawaz Sharif

so the government is failing due to people's prayers or their (in) competence?

Re: How it went wrong for Nawaz Sharif

:rotfl:

Re: How it went wrong for Nawaz Sharif

This was bound to happen

Ganjas doesnt know how to run a govt

How it went wrong for Nawaz Sharif

How the Sher seems to be totally impotent.

How it went wrong for Nawaz Sharif

BBC News - How it went wrong for Nawaz Sharif

Re: How it went wrong for Nawaz Sharif

[quote]
After weeks of conferring with politicians, experts and the army, Mr Sharif announced his policy to counter the Pakistani Taliban on 9 September which all the political parties endorsed - but most experts and the army rejected. The government announced that it would open unconditional talks with the Taliban, declaring them stakeholders rather than terrorists and a government-run All Parties Conference blamed the US and Nato for causing terrorism in Pakistan.

The army and Nawaz Sharif also do not see eye to eye on how fast to improve relations with India. Mr Sharif reached out to India in June, but Delhi has insisted that he should deliver on at least one of three issues - reciprocating with Most Favoured Nation status to enhance trade as India has already done for Pakistan, speed up the trial of seven Lashkar-e-Taiba militants accused of involvement in the 2008 Mumbai massacre and clamp down on Lashkar-e-Taiba and its leader, Hafiz Saeed.

The increased militant violence has led to further paralysis of Pakistan's economy. The rupee is declining by about 2.5% a month, inflation is rising and industry shut down by either militancy or power cuts has yet to restart. GDP growth is less than 3% while the fiscal deficit is nearly 9%. (An eye opener for registani parinda :))

[/quote]

TTP is rightly saying NS has no authority to negotiate. This double dealing of the issue has made situation worst. God knows what will happen to Pakistan. NS has to show his real power according to constitution or go home. If army has to decide most important issues including foreign policies, why in the hell these elections were held in the first place, wasting public money? fooling all the public for all the times. Pakistan is suffering since 911 and continue to suffer till today. Army makes the key decisions right or wrong and bamboos go in the arses of eunuch-impotent politicians.

Bikao corrupt media is also one of the main reason what Pakistan is facing this hell.

Re: How it went wrong for Nawaz Sharif

I don't think anything was expected from the sher in any case. Dollar has crossed 108 rupees, record hike in electricity and petroleum prices. The government has earned over 70 billion in terms of rise of petroleum prices.

Re: How it went wrong for Nawaz Sharif

This is what happens when you cheat :snooty: