Hyderabad:Maulana Fazlur Rehman, leader of Pakistan’s major religious party, the Jamiat Ulema-i-Islam (JUI - F) who is counted as being the most pragmatic and flexible political survivor in a very volatile domain led an ‘Azadi (freedom) March’ against Prime Minister Imran Khan on October 27 and at peak, it was estimated that over 200,000 followers had congregated in Islamabad. The Maulana’s demand was that PM Khan had to resign since the 2018 election that catapulted Imran to power, the JUI leader alleged, was rigged.
On Saturday (Nov 9) the Azadi March had completed two weeks and the stalemate continues. The Imran Khan government has entered into inconclusive negotiations with the Rehbar Committee of opposition interlocutors team and the inclement weather – heavy rains and cold nights – has seen some local participants in the march returning home. Domestic commentators have described the march as having ended in a damp squib and have dismissed the challenge posed by Fazlur Rehman but a more objective analysis would suggest otherwise.
Currently, Pakistan’s main political parties, the PML-N (Pakistan Muslim League – Nawaz) and PPP (Pakistan Peoples Party) are in different states of disarray with former PM Nawaz Sharif and former President Asif Zardari indicted on charges of corruption. Furthermore, Mr Sharif is critically ill and has been released from jail with reports suggesting that he may be flown abroad for medical treatment. It is also evident that there is an undercurrent of a leadership tussle within the PML-N between the brother and daughter of Nawaz Sharif. The assessment is that Mr Sharif’s daughter Maryam will assume leadership of the PML-N at the appropriate time.
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The PPP is also in a state of uneven political consolidation. The senior Zardari who also has health issues is under the scanner on charges of financial impropriety while holding high office. His son Bilawal Bhutto, on whom the political mantle of his mother Benazir and grandfather Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto has fallen, is slowly restoring the credibility and reach of the PPP within the constraints of the tumultuous politics of Pakistan now carefully managed by the army GHQ in Rawalpindi.
It is in this context that Fazlur Rehman has spotted an opportunity to not only establish his relevance in the prevailing political landscape of Pakistan but also settle scores with his arch provincial rival – Imran Khan. It merits recall that Rehman had been appointed as the Ameer of the JUI as far back as 1980 after his father’s demise when he was just 27 years of age and the district of Dera Ismail Khan in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province was his bastion – one that he had inherited from his father. Rehman also has a base among the Pashtun areas in the Balochistan province.
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In contrast, Imran Khan joined politics only in 1996 when he started his party the PTI (Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf) and in a relatively short period, emerged as the more credible political entity in KP. To add insult to injury, in the 2018 national election, Rehman and his party were roundly defeated at the polls for the first time and the relative newcomer, Imran Khan had ousted the erstwhile lion of KP.