son of a typist

Re: son of a typist

agreed.

the only way pakistan will ever develop a solid, civilian democracy is if the power base of the feudal classes is finally broken through the strict enforcement of land reform. as long as we have zamindars and vaderos dictating who their serfs vote for, we're never going to be able to develop any true democratic institutions. india realized this more than 50 years ago...perhaps that's one of reasons why theyve actually succeeded in this regard.

here's the full article:

Dynasties, Not Democracy, May Decide Pakistan's Vote --- In Rural Areas, Running Often Runs in the Family; Three Cousins Face Off **
By Yaroslav Trofimov

2401 words
28 January 2008
The Wall Street Journal
A1
English
(Copyright (c) 2008, Dow Jones & Company, Inc.)

SHAH JEWNA, **Pakistan
-- If next month's parliamentary elections fail to bring sweeping changes to Pakistan, the contest for this constituency deep in the country's heartland may help explain why.

The incumbent lawmaker, Faisal Saleh Hayat, 52 years old, won three of the past six parliamentary races here. His challenger, Abida Hussain, 61, won the other three. Raza Ali Bokhari, 38, is campaigning for the first time, as a self-described "candidate of change."
All three are cousins.

For this trio, party loyalties are transient but family is eternal. The three are all members of Shah Jewna's feudal dynasty, a landholding family that has governed this region for generations, carrying the local vote since British colonial officers introduced elections in the 1920s.
One of the cousins is currently allied with President Pervez Musharraf. The two others profess their opposition to the former military dictator. Otherwise, the three feuding relatives invoke no particular platform or ideology -- Ms. Hussain, for example, represented each of her two rivals' parties in the previous two elections. Instead, they seek support by virtue of their pedigree and ability to dispense patronage.
"My biggest asset is the name of my father, and the name of my grandfather," said Mr. Bokhari, a former marketing executive. "People here hold respect for the family, and they want someone from within the family to represent them."
This constituency of 375,000 voters is a microcosm of electoral battles raging throughout rural Pakistan ahead of a national vote scheduled for Feb. 18. In this milestone election, the party that wins a majority in Parliament will share power with Mr. Musharraf. Together, they will rule a key U.S. ally, a nuclear-armed nation of 160 million people beset by an escalating Islamist insurgency that threatens the region and beyond.
Viewed from afar, the election appears to be a pitched confrontation between believers in civilian democracy and the cronies of Mr. Musharraf, who last fall dismissed the country's Supreme Court, shut down independent TV networks and briefly proclaimed a state of emergency. Mr. Musharraf spent the last week in Europe, meeting with Western leaders to assure them that he was committed to change through democracy.
But these national political issues are often muted in Pakistan's countryside, home to more than 70% of its population. Here, powerful local landlords tend to win election after election, regardless of their changing party affiliations.
"Rural politics and urban politics are completely different: The rural population has been depoliticized, and votes for the individuals," said Imran Khan, a cricket-star-turned-politician whose party is boycotting the elections to protest Mr. Musharraf's clampdown on the judiciary. "The feudals themselves always switch sides to whoever will come to power."
This dynamic often makes elections in Pakistan a clash of egos rather than issues, stifling debate and preventing newcomers of lesser breeding from breaking onto the scene. It is also a central reason why functioning democracy hasn't taken hold in the 60 years since Pakistan was created. Democratic experiments have often collapsed because of elected officials' autocratic behavior and corruption, ending in army coups such as the one that brought Mr. Musharraf to power in 1999.
The best known of Pakistan's feudal dynasties is the family of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, the chairman for life of the Pakistan People's Party until she was assassinated on Dec. 27. She was the daughter of former Prime Minister Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, a landlord in Pakistan's Sindh province and the party's founder. In picking new leadership, the avowedly modern and liberal PPP followed the succession plan laid out in Ms. Bhutto's will -- naming her widower and her 19-year-old son, an Oxford University undergraduate who spent most of the past decade outside Pakistan, as co-chairmen.

With antigovernment anger sweeping Pakistan in the wake of Ms. Bhutto's death, PPP officials say they expect a large sympathy vote on Feb. 18 to bring their party to power. They may find it hard, however, to translate this sympathy into electoral gains in Pakistan's feudal-minded countryside, particularly here in Punjab, which chooses 148 of the country's 272 legislators.

The feudals' lock on power is apparent in this constituency, a sprawling plain of mud-brick villages separated by wheat and sugar-cane fields. Shah Jewna's noble cousins, educated in top Western schools and versed in global affairs, have come a long way from their ancestors, who kept local peasants in medieval-style serfdom. But they retain vast tracts of farmland, doling out favors, money and jobs. When they appear in public, villagers bow down, and, in an ancient show of obeisance, touch the hemlines of their clothes.
The three cousin-candidates represent the family's rival branches: Mr. Hayat and Mr. Bokhari share a paternal great-grandfather, whose brother was Ms. Hussain's paternal grandfather.
Ms. Hussain, the current PPP candidate, is a sharp-tongued, gray-haired former Pakistani ambassador to Washington. She began her political career in the 1970s with the PPP, and has since partaken in all of Pakistan's three major political movements.

In 1997, she was elected to Parliament as a candidate from the Pakistan Muslim League, the conservative party of Ms. Bhutto's foe, former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif. By then one of Ms. Bhutto's most virulent critics, she served as a cabinet minister in Mr. Sharif's government.
Once Mr. Sharif was ousted by Mr. Musharraf in the 1999 coup, the party split into two rival movements. One branch, PML (N), remained loyal to Mr. Sharif. The other, PML (Q), allied itself with Mr. Musharraf.
The next parliamentary elections came in 2002, and Ms. Hussain represented PML (Q). Mr. Hayat campaigned on Ms. Bhutto's PPP ticket. He won.
Once in office, Mr. Hayat, too, switched sides: Joining up with Mr. Musharraf, he became Pakistan's interior minister and is running for PML (Q) in the current election. In a reverse turnaround, Ms. Hussain reconciled with Ms. Bhutto, later festooning Shah Jewna's roads with oversize campaign posters that depict her alongside the assassinated former premier.
Mr. Bokhari, the youngest cousin, said he had a hard time picking a party. He first considered running as a PPP candidate. (His maternal uncle runs the party's Punjab branch.) But when Ms. Hussain gained the Bhutto camp's nod, Mr. Bokhari instead embraced Mr. Sharif. He explained his choice by saying that the campaign symbol of PML (N) is a tiger, a fellow feline of his own zodiac sign, Leo.
Electoral records show that a fourth, independent candidate is on the constituency's ballot -- though it's hard to find evidence of his campaign on Shah Jewna's roads, which are covered with frescoes and posters praising the three cousins. The candidate, a 38-year-old former Asian Development Bank economist named Sarfraz Ahmed Bhatti, said he's had difficulty with the local mentality. Many people here, he complained, "still think that this whole constituency is an estate owned by the family."
Mr. Hayat, the incumbent, is unapologetic about his family's role as he greets a visitor in his manor here, decorated with stuffed antelopes and portraits of him with President George W. Bush, Prince Charles of Wales and Egypt's Hosni Mubarak.
"Whether people like it or not, it's the local families that matter," Mr. Hayat said over tea and biscuits. "It's not about PPP or PML (Q) here. It's Abida [Hussain] versus Faisal [Hayat] -- that's how it is, and that's how it's always been."
Mr. Hayat, a trim and mustachioed Cambridge-educated soccer enthusiast, said he sat on the boards that drew up election platforms for both PPP and PML (Q), and closely inspected the PML (N) manifesto. "All three are the same," he exclaims. "Believe me, there is no difference."
Some voters here, in fact, say they don't know their favorite candidate's party affiliation. "I'll definitely vote for Faisal Hayat," said cobbler Mohammed Riyaz. "I think he used to be with PPP, but I'm not so sure with what party he's now."
Mr. Hayat's appeal has many sources. His 375 acres of farmland provide employment to peasants. As a government minister, he secured development funds for the area. Most importantly, he is also Shah Jewna's hereditary spiritual leader.
All three rival cousins trace their lineage to Prophet Muhammad and descend from a medieval Sufi saint whose shrine attracts hundreds of thousands of pilgrims to the village every year. But Mr. Hayat, as head of the family's most senior branch, is the only one of the three to have inherited the title of custodian of the Shah Jewna shrine.
The temple, a pastel structure of soaring spires, turrets and minarets, is plastered with election posters of Mr. Hayat. Ten days a year, he trades Western-style clothes for a flowing white turban and greets pilgrims at the temple.
In the run-up to the vote, neither Mr. Hayat nor Ms. Hussain have been out to hold a big rally or to visit their voters, they said. Instead, they have received well-wishers and supplicants at their own estates here.
A recent meeting on the lawn outside Mr. Hayat's home was a major affair. A couple hundred notables from the constituency showed up on a cloudy afternoon, as servants prepared vats of food. Once Mr. Hayat emerged outdoors, he was flanked by bodyguards with swaying Kalashnikov assault rifles and a land-mine detector.
A court poet intoned for several minutes. "You are a hero for us, a hero of a kind that's born only once a century," Imtiaz Ali Hassani recited in a high-pitched voice, glancing every few seconds at Mr. Hayat. "Whenever I imagine a flower, I see your face! Even your enemies praise you, for all you have done for the people, for all the megaprojects you've brought here to us."
The biggest of these projects is a $16 million bridge over the river Chenab that, following Mr. Hayat's lobbying, the Pakistani government has started to build. A tributary of the Indus, the Chenab separates Shah Jewna from the highway to Punjab's capital, Lahore, and from the nearest city, Jhang. Currently, Shah Jewna's residents must use a century-old bridge that's barely wide enough for one-way traffic and is often gridlocked for hours. The delays prevent local children from studying in bigger towns and, villagers say, have caused deaths as ambulances await their turn to cross the river.
"We're not like the feudals of the past, who could just sit back and reflect in past glory," Mr. Hayat said. "Whenever I've been in government, I've given people here development projects and jobs."
As Mr. Hayat fed supporters after his campaign event, a few dozen laborers in torn clothes squatted for a break down the road, in Ms. Hussain's sugar-cane field. She is a major shareholder in one of Pakistan's biggest conglomerates, the Packages Group, and also owns a 1,000-acre estate in Shah Jewna that includes a horse-breeding farm, cotton fields and mango orchards.
"She is our sustenance," said one of the workers, Ahmed Ali, as fellow laborers -- some of them children -- chewed sugar-cane stalks. "All of us will vote for her, even if we have to walk all the way to Islamabad for it. Whatever she says, we will do."
Ms. Hussain has run her campaign from her walled-off compound, perched on a veranda decorated with black-and-white photographs of her ancestors and of family racing horses named Montreux, Le Bourgeois and Right Royal.
Ms. Hussain, who was educated in Switzerland and then at an art school in Florence, Italy, listened to the concerns of a few dozen villagers, who sprang to their feet whenever she got up. One wanted a police complaint against him withdrawn; she made the call to the police station. Another sought a government job.
"I'm one of the ultimate feudals of the Punjab," Ms. Hussain said later over lunch indoors with a visitor, as her guests squatted for a communal meal on the veranda. "But I'm also the bonded slave and indentured laborer serving my locality."
Between dispensing favors, Ms. Hussain maintained a running political commentary. Pakistani cities, she lamented, are now overrun by a "yuppie, nouveaux, crass, disgusting lot." Mr. Musharraf, she said, is a tyrant who had murdered Ms. Bhutto. When reminded that Mr. Musharraf has denied such accusations -- saying he doesn't assassinate people because he is "not a feudal and not a tribal" -- Ms. Hussain smiled. "Poor thing, he's a son of clerks," she said. "His mother was just a typist."
Every few minutes, Ms. Hussain's BlackBerry phone rang with updates on the day's proceedings in Mr. Hayat's camp. "I also have my spies," she beamed, repeatedly referring to her nemesis as "this swine."
Mr. Hayat, informed of the epithet, said he will never call Ms. Hussain names. This approach seems to be playing well with Shah Jewna's voters, several of whom say they are put off by Ms. Hussain's temper and unrestrained language.
Mr. Hayat estimates his lead at 25,000 to 30,000 votes, and figures that added sympathy for the PPP following Ms. Bhutto's death could erode it by "a few thousand" ballots at most. (He beat Ms. Hussain by 10,765 votes in 2002, election records show.)
Ms. Hussain said she knows she is facing tough odds. She also isn't high on the chances of her husband, a former speaker of Pakistan's Parliament, who is running in a district a few dozen miles away. "I and my husband will probably lose," she said.

But Ms. Hussain is expecting a Feb. 18 victory by her Harvard-educated daughter, Sughra Imam, a Parliament candidate from PPP in an adjoining constituency. Her rival: Mr. Hayat's younger brother, who also happens to be the former brother-in-law of the third cousin, Mr. Bokhari.
"It's all in the family here," Mr. Bokhari said.

Re: son of a typist

Right On!

By the way, it is not that we don't have pseudo-feudals in the urban middle class. I mean look at it. MQM has been run just like any other feudal party. It has a remote control pilot and no one dares to question him. All those highly educated middle class leaders, meow meow in front of the big boss man.

This can only change when we force these British-Indian political parties to start having primary elections supervised by National election commission, and registered voters among the masses.

Then and only then we can get rid of Munnah Rajah (bilawal) or his co-King Zardari, or other kings and queens like Imran, Altaf, Nawaz etc.

As long we expect totally undemocratic political parties, to bring democracy in the country, we will continue getting the garbage in the name of political leaders.

Did anyone every wonder that even British don't allow the joker political parties?

Heck we claim to follow British parliamentary system, and yet we allow travesty in the name of mafioso political parties.

Re: son of a typist

True, but its especially ironic when you consider the fact that the PPP, since its inception, has pretended to be a populist movement...dedicated to fighting for the rights of the poor...

Re: son of a typist

Thank you!

[quote]
Between dispensing favors, Ms. Hussain maintained a running political commentary. Pakistani cities, she lamented, are now overrun by a "yuppie, nouveaux, crass, disgusting lot." Mr. Musharraf, she said, is a tyrant who had murdered Ms. Bhutto. When reminded that Mr. Musharraf has denied such accusations -- saying he doesn't assassinate people because he is "not a feudal and not a tribal" -- Ms. Hussain smiled. "Poor thing, he's a son of clerks," she said. "His mother was just a typist."
[/quote]

I know its bad what she said but when someone attacks your "roots" this is how many people react.

Re: son of a typist

Everybody is fighting for the "rights" of "poor", nobody claims to fight for the rights for "rich", its pathetic what they do after getting elected. But it doesn't make army rule any better.

Re: son of a typist

I am not MQMist but MQM doesn't win seats in any locality because of the candidate's "fuedal" power. What is MQM's power structure, I don't know, the final call definitely comes from the remote location.

[quote]
This can only change when we force these British-Indian political parties to start having primary elections supervised by National election commission, and registered voters among the masses.
[/quote]

How can a govt force a political party to hold elections? For that we need to have a provision in constitution, who is going to make such a provision? No current political parties will endorse it, it was a possibility when Mush was the sole power player, too bad he got lost in "Pakistan needs me".

Re: son of a typist

Actually MQM runs just like a feudalistic party. They also have a "selected-for-life" so-called leader, just like Munnah Raja (bilawal), Mommy queen (BB), Daddy-queen (zardari), or similar fuedals from other provinces.

The reason why it is so has very much to do how we allow these parties to form in Pakistan.

We copied Indians, and Indians kept the coercive corrosive political party system from British era.

Few people realize that British-Indian Political Party System (BrIPPS) allows dynasties to form religions, and racial groupings and call them so called political parties.

The problem is that such parties create divisions and anarchy in the country.

Just think! British India got divided because Hindu-dominated socialist party called Congress, could not come to terms with Muslim dominated free-market party IML.

Both these parties stuck to their guns and ended up dividing the country yet blaming the other for the anarchy.

Similarly BrIPPS again in 1971 resulted in divisions and ethnic anarchy in East Pakistan when Bengali-dominated party AL refused to "democratically" work with the Sindhi-Punjabi dominated PPP.

Even after 1971 BrIPPS is responsible for the rise of ethno fascists in Pakistan and military coups in BDesh. Look at BDeshis, they are stuck with drama queens Huseena on one side and Zia on the other. These two are "selected-for-life" leaders who run their parties like personal fiefdoms.

India too suffers from the ill effects of BrIPPS. One billion people cannot provide a non-Gandhi leader ship to Congress. There goes the so called democracy in the name of dynasties. Gandhis too treat Congress as a feudal would treat his Jagir.

Again in India it was BrIPPS that was responsible for the rise of BJP, Babri fiasco, and murder of 1000s of minority Muslims.

Funny that even British do not allow BrIPPS like parties in their country.

As long as we follow BrIPPS, feudals and fascists will continue to run these parties ultimately reselting in death and destruction in the country.

Re: son of a typist

Apart from "leader" (who doesn't even participate in elections as opposed to PPP) what else is "fuedalistic"?

[quote]
The reason why it is so has very much to do how we allow these parties to form in Pakistan.
[/quote]

Thank you army!

[quote]
Few people realize that British-Indian Political Party System (BrIPPS) allows dynasties to form religions, and racial groupings and call them so called political parties.
[/quote]
If the government system (or its operators) oppress someone based on religion/race then they are bound to comeback fighting.

[quote]
The problem is that such parties create divisions and anarchy in the country.
[/quote]

Again, thank you army!

[quote]
Both these parties stuck to their guns and ended up dividing the country yet blaming the other for the anarchy.
[/quote]

Remember, these parties were again formed and prospered in era of dictatorship. A la 1960s (PPP), breakaway of BD.

[quote]
As long as we follow BrIPPS, feudals and fascists will continue to run these parties ultimately reselting in death and destruction in the country.
[/quote]

And what is your idea of correcting it?

Re: son of a typist

It is easy to blame the army if you do a myopic analysis of BrIPPS in Pakistan. Just broaden your horizons a bit, and see how BrIPPS has done the same in India, BDesh, and SriLanka.

Feudal dynasties, religious chauvinism, and racially charged groupings are the base of political parties throughout the region.

Indian army was not the cause of BJP wrecking heavoc with Indian Muslims in the name of a dilapidated mosque or temple.

BrIPPS is the cause of allowing mofiosos like Altaf, Imran, Munnah Raja (Bilawal), Mommy Queen (BB), and Daddy Queen (Zardari), Sonya Gandhi, Hasina wajid, Khalida Zia, and Tamilian Hindus to run their parties like personal fiefdoms.

Re: son of a typist

I haven't done analysis of their intelligence agencies, who knows if their armies are structured/behave in same ways? I have more knowledge of Pakistan so I'll focus here.

[quote]
BrIPPS is the cause of allowing mofiosos like Altaf, Imran, Munnah Raja (Bilawal), Mommy Queen (BB), and Daddy Queen (Zardari), Sonya Gandhi, Hasina wajid, Khalida Zia, and Tamilian Hindus to run their parties like personal fiefdoms.
[/quote]

Again, I ask you, what is YOUR solution? What do you think can be done to avoid that? We can ban these faces but that won't educate our "masses" on who to elect.

Re: son of a typist

WTH is a Tamilian Hindu party? If you're referring to LTTE it is not a party.

Religious chauvinism started with casteism on the Hindu side and forced conversions on the muslim side . How do you associate that with the British or political parties?

Feudal dynasties have exised even before the moguls arrived.

Re: son of a typist

That's the core of problem in our analysis. We pick one sample and try to figure out a trend. That won't work.

The sample should be as large as possible. In this case we never see the horrendous impact of BrIPPS on BDesh, SriLanka and even on India.

BrIPPS have been the single most destructive force leading to partitions, killings, and rapes all over the region, and we still want to stick to something even British don't practice.

The solution has nothing to do with "education". Karachi, SriLanka, and Bihar all have pretty high education / literacy rates. Still we see the feudal-set-for-life owners of their parties (like Jagir) like Altaf, Lallu Parsad, and the leaders of Tamil Ilam.

The only thing is to make the election commission rules much more strict. Some suggestions are more practical than the others:

1-- Raise the bar on allowing new parties, and throw out Tonga parties like TI.

2--Then make sure that primary elections are conducted by the government within each party and throughout the country.

3--Election alliances must be formed before primaries. Once an election alliance is formed, it can be broken until the next election time.

4--Only the winners of primary elections should be allowed to go for the national elections.

5- Have fixed date for starting elections. Pick up autumn or spring season and conduct the primary and national polls at a fix date every 4 or 5 years. No more snap elections.

Any party disobeying these rules will be disbarred for 2 election cycles.

Re: son of a typist

Well that's a low below for anyone to criticize anyone else based where one comes from. It should be a matter of Pride that Mr. Musharraf was able to progress and make his way to the top despite being from a lower-middle/middle-class family. Bravo to him for coming up like that!

And shame on Ms. Hussein or whoever, for making such remarks based on one's family background and the status in society.

Re: son of a typist

I didn't claim of searching or find a "trend", rather look at what our army or intelligence agencies have done so far.

[quote]
The solution has nothing to do with "education". Karachi, SriLanka, and Bihar all have pretty high education / literacy rates. Still we see the feudal-set-for-life owners of their parties (like Jagir) like Altaf, Lallu Parsad, and the leaders of Tamil Ilam.
[/quote]

I am not talking about "education" as in literacy, rather education regarding "election" process, objectives etc.

[quote]
2--Then make sure that primary elections are conducted by the government within each party and throughout the country.
[/quote]

It is going to open gates for govt interference within parties.

[quote]
3--Election alliances must be formed before primaries. Once an election alliance is formed, it can be broken until the next election time.
[/quote]

I agree, this will block horse trading/lota-giri behavior we have seen in past.

But how are these rules going to block corrupts, fascists, terrorists etc?

Re: son of a typist

Mushrraf should be grateful to a country that gave him the chance to become what he is. He should have had faith in the system, and if he was any good, he should have followed the system, retire from the army & run for the political office. Instead he staged a coup and ever since he has done all he could to destroy the system, and the governing institutions of the country.

Nelson Mondale spent 27 years in jail, he did not sage coup, but change the system for good in his country. Gandhi freed India from British colonial rule. Those were leaders who changed their nations, and are examples of what a leader should be, unlike Mushraf. Few days back ex Indonesian dictator Suharto died....even though he did lot of good for his country, no one will remember him for that. He will be remember for those who disappeared during his rule. This is what Mushrraf will be remember for. The dictators are never remember for anything good.

Re: son of a typist

I do not see why the big fuss being raised about Feudal Dynasties…since we aspire to emulate the Democracy in USA.


Seems we have seen the Bush Dynasty and will switch to Clinton Dynasty next…and before that we almost had the Kennedys:halo:

Re: son of a typist

That’s right. Pakistan is indeed better off than it was prior to 1999. The great President Musharaf has saved Pakistan with his timely intervention. :k:

Re: son of a typist

  :k:

Re: son of a typist

Its true that Pakistani elite have siilar attitude towards middle class, but in this regard army itslef is no better.

They call ordinary people as bloody civilians. And if a son of non-comissioned army person rises to high ranks, is also reminded that his father was a Hawaldaar etc.

Infact i have seen this attitude in many other people, all who caim to be proud of belonging to some elite social or ethnic group. Look at Obama, he taunted for being son of a Nigerian.