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General Musharraf's bitter harvest
By Irshad Salim

 

International observers from the European Union have said that Pakistan's general election was seriously flawed by official interference in favour of parties supporting President Pervez Musharraf.

But results from Thursday's election gave a party allied to President Pervez Musharraf only 80 seats, which is well short of an overall majority in an assembly of 272 members.

In fact parties opposed to President General Pervez Musharraf have won a sizeable number of seats in the new national parliament and the four provincial assemblies.

A strong showing by MMA, a coalition of six fiery anti-Western religious parties, which opposes Musharraf and his policies, means that a party opposing Musharraf may hold the balance of power.

Pakistan Muslim League Qaide Azam (PML-QA), which is supportive of President Pervez Musharraf and referred to as the 'King's Party', won only 80 seats followed by 62 bagged by Pakistan People's Party Parliamentarians (PPPP)- a subsidiary of Benazir Bhutto's Pakistan Peoples Party. MMA- the anti-western alliance of Taliban-supportive religious parties won 52. . Independents won  26 seats. And, PPPP's present political partner PML(N) bagged only 14 seats.

Even if Musharraf's machinery did try to 'doctor' the results, it appears that the plan boomeranged. It is now clear that three years of military rule by General Musharraf have left the country divided.

Given the present scenario, President Musharraf would face a hard choice of whether to seek an accord with the PPP and the PML (N), as he does not see eye to eye with their leaders or with the MMA bitterly opposed to his alliance with the US-led coalition against war on terrorism.

Prior to his departure Benazir's second in command Makhdoom Amin Fahim held talks with General  Musharraf and the all-powerful ISI in which it is reported that Fahim was offered the premiership if his party formed a coalition with the PML-QA and the independents.

Although PPP acting secretary general Mian Raza Rabbani on Friday ruled out an alliance with the PML (QA), at a news conference in Islamabad, party sources say the chief point of discussion between Benazir Bhutto and Makhdoom Amin Fahim, the president of the PPP’s “Parliamentarians” electoral entity who was in London for consultations with the party chairperson, was the possibility of partnership with the “king’s party” for the formation of a coalition government.

According to news reports, leaders of the PML-QA and the PPPP are locked in secret talks to hammer out a post-election deal on the formation of a coalition government.

The PPP would cooperate fully with the PML-QA to work for national reconciliation, PPP leader Makhdoon Amin Fahim told a press conference after returning from London. The two parties would discuss the possibility of forming a coalition central government, he announced.

Based on all the foregoing, it is clear that even if Musharraf did try to influence the election results, he has in fact ended up with a bitter harvest.

As damage control, it is likely that the idea of a PML(Q) and PPPP coalition has been floated by Musharraf's team lest forces inimical tohim overtake the direction of changes he wants to pursue.

Even if a coalition of 'King's party' and Benazir's PPP do materialize, the coalition of six fiery anti-Western religious parties will remain a power to reckon with, both inside and outside the parliament. This is the first time in 55 years of Pakistan's history that the 'Mullahs' enjoy a greater political say than always. And, trust me, they will exercise it to the hilt!

Traditionally, the religious parties have had trouble winning seats, but the MMA's anti-US message went down particularly well in areas bordering Afghanistan, where there had been some support for the Taleban.

In parliament and in the two northern provinces which abut Afghanistan, MMA's strong presence will be a source of concern not only for the new coalition government but also for Musharraf and his western allies.

Western powers, albeit 'the coalition against terror', may have blessed this idea, given the seriousness of  their interests in the turbulent South-Asian regional politics vis-a-vis their war against terrorism. Western coalition plans to stay in Afghanistan not only to protect their realigned geo-political interests but to insure smooth uninterrupted access to Afghanistan's and Central Asia's vast oil and gas resources. In the overall chessboard of western strategy, Pakistan is vital as long as it remains a moderate state with access to the Arabian sea.

Whether Washington likes it or not, American policy has been seen as anti-Islamic and the campaign against Al-Qaeda and the Taleban has been viewed as a campaign against Islam. Thus, that is the message the US must take from the unexpectedly strong showing of the six-party religious alliance called MMA.

General Musharraf, who is West's 'ally against terror' for another five years, is therefore clearly keen to get an assembly with which he (and the western powers specially the US) can work.

But MMA will definitely form state governments in the two northern provinces of NWFP and Baluchistan and will choose to run the affairs of their provinces on a striclty Islamic line. Whether Musharraf and the West like it or not!

 



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