Nice Election Analysis

Pakistan elections: how Nawaz Sharif beat Imran Khan and what happens next | World news | The Guardian

Pakistan elections: how Nawaz Sharif beat Imran Khan and what happens next

The results of the Pakistan elections are in – but how did a former exile win the vote? By promising airports to people who can’t afford bicycles, says novelist Mohammed Hanif

Link to video: Pakistan election: Nawaz Sharif’s Muslim League claims victoryHere’s a little fairytale from Pakistan. Fourteen years ago a wise man ruled the country. He enjoyed the support of his people. But some of his treacherous generals thought he wasn’t that smart. One night he was held at gunpoint, handcuffed, put in a dark dungeon, sentenced to life imprisonment. But then a little miracle happened; he, along with his family and servants, was put on a royal plane and exiled to Saudi Arabia, that fancy retirement home for the world’s unwanted Muslim leaders.
Two days ago that same man stood on a balcony in Lahore, thanked Allah and said: Nawaz Sharif forgives them all.
But wait, if it was a real fairytale, Imran Khan would have won the election instead, right? Can’t Pakistani voters tell between a world-famous, world cup-winning, charismatic leader and a mere politician who refers to himself in the third person?
Why didn’t Imran Khan win?

Imran Khan in hospital after a fall at a campaign rally. Photograph: HO/AFPWell he has, sort of. But not in the way he would have liked. Visiting foreign journalists have profiled Imran Khan more than they have profiled any living thing in this part of the world. If all the world’s magazine editors were allowed to vote for Imran Khan he would be the prime minister of half the English-speaking world. If Imran Khan had contested in west London he would have won hands-down. But since this is Pakistan, he has won in Peshawar and two other cities. His party is set to form a government in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, that north-western frontier province of Pakistan which Khan’s profile writers never fail to remind us is the province that borders Afghanistan and the tribal areas that the world is so scared of. Or as some others never fail to remind the world: the land of the fierce pathans.
It’s true that Khan ran a fierce, bloody-minded campaign, drawing huge crowds. When his campaign culminated in a televised tumble from a stage, during a public rally, the whole nation held its breath. Khan galvanised not only Pakistan’s parasitical upper classes but also found support among the country’s young men and women of all ages; basically the kind of people who use the words politics and politician as common insults. He inspired drawing-room revolutionaries to go out and stand in the blistering heat for hours on end to vote for him. For a few months he made politics hip in Pakistan. Partly, he was relying on votes from Pakistan’s posh locales. He probably forgot that there was a slight problem there: not enough posh locales in Pakistan. There were kids who flew in from Chicago, from Birmingham to vote for him. Again, there are not enough Pakistani kids living and studying in Chicago and Birmingham. He appealed to the educated middle classes but Pakistan’s main problem is that there aren’t enough educated urban middle-class citizens in the country.

And the masses, it appears, were not really clamouring for a revolution but for electricity.
From the gossip columns of British tabloids to massive political rallies across Pakistan, Khan has been on a meaningful journey. In his campaign speeches, his blatantly Blairite message of New Pakistan did appeal to people but he really tested his supporters’ attention span when he started to lecture them about how the Scandinavian welfare state model is borrowed from the early days of the Islamic empire in Arabia. Amateur historians have never fared well in Pakistani politics. Or anywhere else. Khan promised to turn Pakistan into Sweden, Norway or any one of those countries where everyone is blond and pays tax. His opponents promised Dubai – where everyone is either a bonded labourer or a property speculator and no one pays taxes – and won.

It’s a bit of a fairytale that Khan, whose message was directed at educated urban voters, has found supporters in the north-western frontier province that profile writers must remind us is largely tribal and the front line of the world’s war on terror. Khan has led a popular campaign against drone attacks. He has promised that he will shoot down drones, look Americans in the eye, sit down with the Taliban over a cup of qahwa](Coffee and qahwa: How a drink for Arab mystics went global - BBC News) and sort this mess out.

So we finally have someone who feels at home in Mayfair as well as Peshawar. He finally has the chance to rule Peshawar. Slight problem: as he speaks no Pashto, the language of the Pathans. But his first fight will be against American drones hovering in the sky. And drones speak no Pashto either. If Khan can win this match, he can challenge Nawaz Sharif in the next elections.

Hasn’t he been tried before? Twice? It seems voters in the largest province of Pakistani Punjab just can’t have enough of this guy. At every campaign stop, Sharif reminded his supporters of two of his biggest achievements: I built the motorway, I built the bomb. He did build Pakistan’s first motorway. And despite several phone calls from the then American president Bill Clinton and other world leaders and offers of million of dollars in aid, Sharif did go ahead and order six nuclear explosions in response to India’s five. And then he thought that now that both countries have the bomb he could go ahead and be friends with India. While he was making history hosting the Indian prime minister in the historic city of Lahore, his generals were busy elsewhere repeating history on the mountains of Kargil. In a misadventure typical of Pakistani generals, they occupied the abandoned posts and then pretended that these were mujahideen fighting India and not regular Pakistan army soldiers.

When India reacted with overwhelming force and a diplomatic offensive, Sharif pleaded ignorance and rushed off to Washington to bail out the army and his own government. President Clinton praised his diplomatic skills and the crisis was resolved briefly. When, months later he tried to fire his handpicked army chief General Pervez Musharraf, the architect of the Kargil fiasco, a bunch of army officers put their guns to Sharif’s head. Handcuffed, jailed, sentenced to life imprisonment, in the end Sharif was saved by his powerful friends in Saudi Arabia. A royal jet flew him, his family and his servants to a palace in Saudi Arabia. An exile in Saudi Arabia for Muslim rulers is generally considered a permanent retirement home where you get closer to Allah and atone for past sins. Sharif must be the only politician in exile in Saudi Arabia who not only managed to survive this holy exile but in the process got a hair transplant and managed to hold on to his political base in Pakistan.

Many of his political opponents say that if Sharif wasn’t from the dominant province Punjab, where most of the army elite comes from, if he didn’t represent the trading and business classes of Punjab, he would still be begging forgiveness for his sins in Saudi. But he returned just before the last elections and has been behaving like a statesman. A very rich statesman.

It has yet to be proven whether eight years of exile in Saudi Arabia can make anyone wiser but it has never made anybody poorer. Sharif was rich before he got into politics, then he became fabulously rich. Even in exile the Saudis gave him a palace and, on his return, a fleet of bulletproof limousines. His campaign proved that poor people don’t really vote for somebody who understands poverty, or wants to do anything about it. People have voted him in because he talks money, talks about spending money, talks about opening a bank on every village street and who doesn’t like that? He has promised motorway connections and airports to towns so small that they still don’t have a proper bus station. Poor people, who couldn’t afford a bicycle at the time of the elections, like to be promised an airport. You never know when you might need it.

In his five years’ rule in Punjab, Sharif’s party has had one policy about the Pakistani Taliban who have been wreaking havoc in parts of Pakistan: please go and do your business elsewhere. And they have generally obliged. But now that he is set to rule all of Pakistan, what’s he going to tell them?

Have we defeated the Taliban or sent them a friend request?

When Pakistan decided to throw itself an election party, the first ones to arrive were the Taliban. They weren’t really interested in the party because they keep reminding us that elections are un-Islamic and a major sin on a par with educating girls. But they were interested in watching what party games were played and who got to play them. They decided that the three political parties that had ruled Pakistan for the past five years and taken a clear stand against the Taliban would be targeted. And the Taliban started their own campaign, targeting candidates and their supporters with bomb attacks and drive-by shootings. In one case, a candidate in Karachi was shot as he came out of a mosque. Along with his six-year-old son. The election campaign across Pakistan looked like this: some parties held huge rallies, in a carnival-type atmosphere with live tigers and massive music systems. Other candidates sneaked from one little corner meeting to another trying to remind people of their heroic stand against the Taliban. Many of the candidates were never seen in public. Many journalists refused to visit them because they were sitting targets. Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, the public face of the ruling People’s party, could only deliver a couple of video messages from Dubai.
The other parties, the ones who were allowed to campaign freely, were grateful in their silence. When we look at the election results we must not forget that while the Pakistani Taliban didn’t contest the elections as a political party, they did see themselves as kingmakers. In Pakistan’s liberal media the Taliban are often described as brutes with an endless bloodlust. But by making allies and choosing partners they have demonstrated that they are at least as canny as the average campaigning politician.

But in the end the Taliban failed to deliver the kind of devastation they had promised. They managed to kill about 130 people in eight weeks. In the past they have achieved that kind of number in a single day. Also, 60% of Pakistanis who came out to vote seem to be politely disagreeing with the Taliban by saying that there is nothing un-Islamic about standing in a queue and stamping a ballot paper.

T**he Taliban’s real success is that they bet on the winners. They promised not to attack Khan and Sharif’s parties. And these parties will be in power. But the Taliban have never contested an election before. And they are soon to find out that politicians never keep the promises they make during the heat of the campaign.
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Three weeks before the elections, a 27-year-old biochemistry graduate stood outside Karachi Press club. Farzana Majeed and a couple of dozen young people carried pictures of Zakir Majeed, a literature student who was abducted by Pakistan’s military intelligence four years ago and since then has become one of the hundreds of missing Baloch people, mostly young, political activists. Their mutilated, tortured bodies turn up on the roadside with sickening regularity. The Pakistani media, otherwise quite noisy about every subject under the sun, stay quiet. None of the political parties campaigning in recent elections uttered a word about Zakir Majeed or hundreds of other people languishing in military-run dungeons. Why? Because it’s a security issue. A militant separatist movement in parts of Balochistan means that the rest of Pakistan sees it as an enemy. The protesters distributed pamphlets encouraging the fellow Balochs not to participate in the elections. The voter turn out in Baloch areas in Balochistan has been less than 10%. No political party in the country had the heart to go and ask Farzana Majeed or thousands of other families to vote. Farzana is a polite, articulate person but mention the word elections and she is likely to wave her missing brother’s picture in front of you. And just like Pakistan’s last political government, the new one also doesn’t want to see this picture.

Who needs a federation when you can have so much more fun doing things your own way. So in the post-election Pakistan, Khan will rule the north and shoot down American drones while discussing Scandinavian social welfare models with the Taliban. Sharif will rule in Punjab and the centre, try to do business with India and build more motorways all the while looking over his shoulder for generals looking at him. In the south, Bhutto’s decimated People’s party will keep ruling and keep saying that folks up north are stealing its water, destroying its social welfare programmes and secular legacy. And, in Balochistan, Farzana Majeed will keep waving her missing brother’s picture.
Do these bits add up to a country? They do, if you are sitting in Islamabad and showing off your nuclear weapons to the world or planning a motorway to central Asia. But if you are an old woman waiting for her 2,000-rupee welfare cheque or a student activist in a military dungeon waiting for your next interrogation session, you are not likely to dream of motorways and new airports.

Pakistan as a federation has gone through its first rite of passage: handover of power from one elected civilian setup to another. It took Pakistan 67 years to get here. Let us not forget that the reasons that caused this delay haven’t disappeared.
Mohammed Hanif is BBC Urdu’s special correspondent based in Karachi. He is the author of A Case of Exploding Mangoes and Our Lady of Alice Bhatti
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Re: Nice Election Analysis

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Khan promised to turn Pakistan into Sweden, Norway or any one of those countries where everyone is blond and pays tax. His opponents promised Dubai – where everyone is either a bonded labourer or a property speculator and no one pays taxes – and won.**

hahaha

Re: Nice Election Analysis

Heres another good one. The last line is epic. Gives you an idea of just how much this ‘experienced’ Sharif has learnt.

Has the lion been tamed? - Telegraph

Has the lion been tamed?

Nawaz Sharif’s previous two stints as Pakistan’s prime minister ended in ignominy, but he is now said to be a changed man. David Blair and Rob Crilly assess the prospects for his third term – and for the country’s relationship with the West.

Hijacking an aircraft is not an offence you would normally associate with a man who stands on the verge of becoming prime minister of his country.

If the leader-in-waiting had also chosen to answer a charge of contempt of court by allowing a mob to storm the hearing and threaten the judges, that might be still more surprising.

If the fabulously wealthy politician in question had moreover declared that in a period of two years he paid £6.50 in income tax, you might be forgiven for believing that his rise to power must be a work of fiction.

In Pakistan, however, reality often outdoes the most imaginative fiction and all of the above is true of Nawaz Sharif, the man who has just achieved a remarkable comeback by winning an election and lining himself up to be prime minister for a third time.

First things first. The hijacking conviction – along with a formidable array of other criminal verdicts – was overturned in 2009. And Mr Sharif’s declaration that he paid $10 (£6.50) of income tax between 1994 and 1996 must be set against the fact that he broke no law and stumped up another $60,000 (£39,000) in wealth tax.

None the less, it would be fair to say that if the failure of Pakistan’s political system has a face, then Mr Sharif’s cherubic features would once have fitted the bill.
That leaves one question hanging over the victor of this election: can he possibly live down the memory of his first two stints as prime minister? In his political heartland of Punjab, Pakistan’s most populous province, Mr Sharif’s supporters call him the “lion”. Can this 63‑year‑old lion possibly change his game? Or is he fated to symbolise the worst of a political system based on patronage, power-hunger and preservation of privilege?
Those closest to him insist that he is a changed man. Throughout the election campaign, his favourite daughter, Maryam, 39, has been his principal cheerleader. While canvassing voters from her bullet-proof car in the old town of Lahore, she told journalists: “He’s a thinker now. I think there’s no hunger or greed for power. This is the time he wants to do something for the country.”
The trouble is that when Mr Sharif last had the chance to do something for Pakistan, things did not turn out well. His first term as prime minister between 1990 and 1993 ended in ignominy when he was sacked by the president for alleged corruption.
That experience meant that when he won the 1996 election – requiring the famous tax declaration on his nomination papers – Mr Sharif harboured an obsessive desperation to cling to power.
First, he rewrote the constitution to ban the president from ever sacking a prime minister again. Then Mr Sharif moved to neutralise every other centre of power. When parliament proved troublesome, another amendment made MPs legally obliged to vote according to the party line. As for the judiciary, his idea of responding to a charge of contempt was to boycott the hearing and send a mob of supporters instead, who duly ransacked the Supreme Court in 1997 and threatened the judges.
Along the way, Mr Sharif’s last government armed the Taliban regime in Afghanistan, tested nuclear weapons (in response to earlier detonations in India) and blundered into an undeclared war that cost hundreds of lives by sending Pakistani troops deep into Indian-held territory during the Kargil affair in 1999.
But there was one institution that Mr Sharif failed to subdue: Pakistan’s all-powerful army. The prime minister tried his best, sacking the army chief, General Pervez Musharraf, while the latter was in mid-air, en route to Pakistan from an official visit to Sri Lanka.
That decision sealed Mr Sharif’s downfall. Desperate to prevent the general from getting back to the country and taking revenge by launching a coup, he ordered Karachi airport not to allow the plane to land. The runway of Pakistan’s busiest airport was duly blocked with three fire engines.
Meanwhile, Pakistan International Airlines flight PK805, an Airbus A300 with Gen Musharraf and 197 other passengers on board, was told that it could not land in Pakistan. There was a problem: the aircraft had insufficient fuel to go anywhere else.
“I advised Karachi air traffic control that I had 198 souls on board, a limited amount of fuel and that if we were not allowed to land, we would lose the aircraft and that would be end of the story,” the flight’s captain later recalled.
At the last moment, with the plane down to seven minutes of fuel, the army took control of Karachi airport and allowed the Airbus to land. Once on the ground, Gen Musharraf immediately overthrew Mr Sharif, consigning him first to prison and then into exile.
The deposed prime minister paid the traditional price of political failure in Pakistan: Mr Sharif was assailed by criminal cases and soon accumulated a battery of convictions. In 2000, he was found guilty of hijacking and corruption and banned from holding office for 21 years.
He lived in luxurious exile in Saudi Arabia until 2007, when Gen Musharraf’s regime became so discredited and unpopular that opponents of military rule were allowed to return. Mr Sharif flew back to Pakistan, but those court verdicts prevented him from contesting the last election in 2008. All the convictions were overturned the following year, clearing the way for yesterday’s triumph.
The claim that Mr Sharif is a changed man cannot be dismissed. Western diplomats speak privately of a more mature politician, ready to compromise in the interests of Pakistan.
President Asif Ali Zardari, the husband of the late Benazir Bhutto, is one of Mr Sharif’s oldest political foes. The outgoing government was deeply unpopular and Mr Sharif, whose PML-N party held 91 seats on the opposition benches, might have been expected to take his first opportunity to turf out the president’s administration.
He chose not to. Instead, Mr Sharif’s restraint was one of the factors allowing the last government to be the first civilian administration in Pakistan’s history to serve a full term.
Experts who observed the vindictive politician of old believe that Mr Sharif might indeed have changed. “He is more diplomatic and more pragmatic than he used to be,” says Osama Siddique, from the policy department at Lahore University of Management Sciences. “He still has a lot of issues, but he has learnt from taking on the military and judiciary head on.”
Other factors might also keep Mr Sharif on the straight and narrow. Imran Khan, the cricket captain turned party leader, won 35 seats in this election, up from zero in the last parliament. Mr Khan never had a realistic chance of winning outright, but he could now become a formidable opposition leader, capable of making Mr Sharif pay a heavy price for any transgressions.
The fact that this election saw a turnout of about 60 per cent – exceptionally high by Pakistani standards – will strengthen the country’s democracy. Meanwhile, the local media is more diverse and outspoken than ever before, with a plethora of new television news channels.
In one respect, nothing is likely to change. Pakistan’s tortured cooperation with the West against terrorism will remain the preserve of the army and the security establishment. The core leadership of al-Qaeda remains based on the frontier with Afghanistan and Mr Sharif, the arch pragmatist, will not turn away from America and the West. On the contrary, he sent reassuring signals in his recent interview with The Sunday Telegraph.
But there remains the shadow cast by his record in office. As the results came in at his campaign headquarters, Mr Sharif was asked about his mistakes in power.
“There are so many things playing on my mind,” he replied. “I can’t remember those mistakes.”