From Osama to Taliban, where are the Sharifs headed? – by Saeed Minhas

Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif’s careful treading through the power corridors received a severe blow as his public appeal to the Taliban for avoiding his fiefdom raised an unprecedented hue and cry in the National Assembly.

If the CM’s actions are not enough, the younger Sharifs meeting with Chief of Army Staff Gen Ashfaq Pervez Kiyani in Rawalpindi was taken as another political blunder made by the ambitious prodigy of a family known for its love affair with the Army GHQ and extreme-right entities – known as non-state actors in modern politicking.

Parliamentarians from across the board could not resist the temptation to pounce on the Sharifs by highlighting their Punjab-centric and pro-establishment past throughout Monday and for ridiculing the rest of the three provinces. Our friends from NWFP and Balochistan were furious and shared their venom by saying the Sharifs should start to bid adieu to all their hopes.

Perhaps taken aback by an unexpected (surely unscripted) slip of the tongue, the younger Sharif’s political mentors, especially the intellectual maestro from Lahore and GHQ-expert from Rawalpindi, could not do much but rush for fresh advice from their well-fed local and imported spin-doctors. Much to their grief, the outspoken street-smart wiz-kids of Lahori and Sialkoti origin could also not manage to help bail them out of the mess, as both of them have been dispatched to settle personal scores against the Chaudhrys of Gujrat in a by-election. Finding no one coming to the rescue of his political custodian, Hamza Shahbaz was forced to meekly stand before the media and take their blows on his chin.

Cafeteria, corridors and even galleries were abuzz with this discussion and Nawaz leaguers, who were very recently flying high on their by-election victories were visibly deflated, being forced to avoid making eye contact with the media. On the floor of the House, if their fellow male parliamentarians were asking for an apology from their party leader, they were also being shown dupatas by some female colleagues who were mimicking Nighat Orakzai, an NWFP MPA who had earlier in the day offered her head scarf to Shahbaz for being cowardly and perhaps for inciting the Taliban to attack others not in his province.

These heartbroken leaguers seem to have all the reasons for pointing fingers at the advisors of the Sharif bothers, especially towards the chair of their House leader, whom some of them consider an autocrat within the democratic (but currently dissolved) setup of their party. One of the leaguer, a lawyer from Lahore, could not remain silent, whispering “lets hope the elder Sharif starts listening to some saner elements now and come out of the company of his trusted men”.

Being an Amratsari-Kashmiri, he added that Mian sahib likes to eat well, get driven around by trusted men and get a good twitching massage on his kneecaps and legs. “But that cannot be true of a person who is dubbed as a leader in waiting and who undoubtedly holds complete sway in Punjab. It also remains a fact that of all the political parties, if anyone is matching MQM’s media model, then it’s the Sharifs. They believe in hiring the best of the best to work for their image glorification and providing them spin options.” A news-bugger, who claims to be a correspondent of some secret publication, was thrusting this analysis upon all of us when an ever-smiling MQM’s bhai-log kicked in with his usual dribble, “we have a media team equipped with technological superiority whereas Mian sahib prefers to hire those already serving in high positions”.

Revisiting the past is always painful for most of the players in our treacherous political history, but facts cannot be denied, said a soft-spoken parliamentarian hailing from the ANP. He said that following the first secret call-on of Shahbaz, Mian sahib had taken a back seat when he was told by party hawks that power remains the ultimate goal of the younger ace of the family. This was exactly the reason, why the late Sharif never introduced Shahbaz to Gen Jillani back in the 80s and offered Nawaz for induction in the Ziaul Haq set up.

From meeting with Osama Bin Laden to toppling Benazir’s 1988 government to formation of the IJI, the ANP leader claimed that Mian sahib had been in close contact with NWFP and FATA parliamentarians. Before the MQM, our parliamentarians used to be key to making governments, he recalled, adding that the Sharifs love for “Jihad” and his efforts to impose himself on the nation as Caliph are all part of our recent past. “I vividly remember the Jamaat-e-Islami’s advertorial campaign against Sharifs in which they relied on the slogan of “Qazi Aa Giya” (Qazi Hussain has arrived) and alleged that Nawaz had betrayed the cause of the IJI,” he added.

Source: Daily Times

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