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Imran Khan: from cricket hero to Pakistan leader?

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Imran Khan: from cricket hero to Pakistan leader?


ISLAMABAD: As an imperious all-rounder who dominated the cricket pitches he graced for more than two decades, Imran Khan exhibited a self-belief that often made Pakistan’s opponents crumble.


But that lordly demeanour may not serve him as well on the political wicket as a self-proclaimed saviour of the strife-torn country, despite his status as a national hero for leading Pakistan to its only World Cup title in 1992.

Khan brims with confidence that he can solve Pakistan’s myriad and devastating problems.

Striding into an interview, kitted out in tiny running shorts and drenched in sweat after an afternoon workout in 80 percent humidity, he swats away any doubts about his prospects at the ballot box.

Nuclear-armed Pakistan returned to civilian rule in 2008 after nearly a decade under military dictator Pervez Musharraf. Elections are due by 2013 at the latest.

Asked whether he would contest the next polls after boycotting the last vote, the 58-year-old was emphatic.

“Stand for election? We will sweep the election. What are you talking about – ‘stand’? The next party in power is going to be Tehreek-e-Insaf,” Khan said, referring to the Movement for Justice party he founded.

“I’m taking bets with anyone. You know I played five World Cups, never did I ever tell anyone, except in the last World Cup, that we would win it,” he added at his sprawling hilltop home overlooking the capital Islamabad.

Twenty-one years on the cricket pitch, he says, honed a “killer instinct” and with Pakistan lurching from political to economic to security crisis under the fragile People’s Party coalition, he believes power is within his grasp.

But Khan’s party has no seats in parliament and it is criticised for lacking grassroots support and the infrastructure needed to win an election.

While Khan was long a darling of the Western media, dazzled first by his “playboy” lifestyle and then celebrity marriage to – and divorce from – British heiress Jemima Goldsmith, his reputation at home is more circumspect.

Secular commentators, Western journalists and officials also express alarm at his policies – in particular his call for an end to Pakistani military operations against the Taliban and his populist anti-Americanism.

Yet last week US pollsters Pew Research Center named Khan as the most popular politician in the country, with an approval rating of 68 percent. Pew gave President Asif Ali Zardari a miserly rating of 11 percent.

Khan says Pew’s findings were a vindication of his call for an independent judiciary, his anti-corruption drive and demands for an end to the “insane” war on terror conducted by the US-allied Pakistani leadership.

“The ruling elite, just for the sake of US support and dollars, is killing its own people, paid to kill its own people. It is the most shameful part of our history,” he said.


The government, opposition and military have undoubtedly been discredited by rampant Taliban and al Qaeda-linked violence, economic meltdown, perennial political crises and the US raid against Osama bin Laden on May 2.

Khan rejects conspiracy theories that bin Laden was not killed in Abbottabad but describes his death at the hands of US Navy SEALs as “cold-blooded murder”, comparing it unfavourably to the courtroom justice meted out to the Nazis.

Khan is a man of contradictions who straddles cultural divides; the elite world of his education at Oxford University, and that lived by the masses who are drawn to his cricketing appeal and calls to tax the rich.

His recommended reading is the “brilliant” “My Life with the Taliban” by Abdul Salam Zaeef, once the Islamists’ ambassador to Pakistan and later an inmate at Guantanamo Bay.

Yet Khan rubbishes any prospect of Talibanisation in Pakistan, a country he says is dominated by the mystical Sufi strand of Islam.

His solution to the semi-autonomous tribal belt, where a homegrown Taliban insurgency is concentrated and foreign militants are based, is a peace agreement.

He compares his appeal to the popularity of prime minister Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, who was voted in on a socialist ticket in 1970 before being hanged nine years later following a military coup.

But few share his confidence.

Veteran political analyst Hasan Askari says Khan will struggle to translate crowds into votes and will suffer for his stance on the Taliban and his name-calling of opponents.

“People in Pakistan cast their votes with a lot of considerations, and Imran’s problem is that he is calling every leader a thief,” he said.

Imran Khan: from cricket hero to Pakistan leader? | Pakistan | DAWN.COM

Do read comments there as well.
 
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I thought a few months ago, it was felt including on this forum that he was the new saviour to save Pakistan!

What happened for him that has made him fall out of favour?
 
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Although i support him but i don't think he can win majority in next elections.
 
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I thought a few months ago, it was felt including on this forum that he was the new saviour to save Pakistan!

What happened for him that has made him fall out of favour?

He is the only hope. sorry but i didn't understood what you were trying to say.
 
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Sports Persons are not Good Politicians,
 
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Although i support him but i don't think he can win majority in next elections.

yes Dramatic development may lead to extra ordinary situation, otherwise he might only be able to win in KP and Punjab... formulation of KP government would prove to be great for PTI, and working as Pressure group in Punjab would be another step towards their ultimate power...

this is the high time to join and work for PTI, if anyone is seeking career as a politician ...
 
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yes Dramatic development may lead to extra ordinary situation, otherwise he might only be able to win in KP and Punjab... formulation of KP government would prove to be great for PTI, and working as Pressure group in Punjab would be another step towards their ultimate power...

this is the high time to join and work for PTI, if anyone is seeking career as a politician ...

Afetr Ajk elections i m doubtful about next general elections as well.
 
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Not quite.

It is being said that his namecalling and calling all a thief is not going down well.

Not true. The recent survey showed that he is the most popular leader in Pakistan at the moment.
 
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Not quite.

It is being said that his namecalling and calling all a thief is not going down well.

So what one should call it. A thief is a thief, or should it be better to call it Zardari?;) All these politicians have done nothing and they have shown that they are not even capable of doing anything. And with that corruption and personal favors that cost the country Billions.
Only example. PIA Lost 60Billion Rs under zardari's appointed Chairman. Steel mills from earning handsome profits in 2008 is bankcrupt because Zardari appointed "Special Thief" as its chairman as well.
We are in 1 trillion deficit and 400Billion of that is only because of PIA, Steel Mills, Railways and Pepco. What these politicians have done to reduce this?
Political will and honesty is required and believe me we don't need any Aid.
 
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Imran asks SC to take suo moto against Mukhtar

Published: July 01, 2011

ISLAMABAD - Condemning the statement of Defence Minister that 3,000 youths from Swat and other parts of the country are under detention without legal recourse, Chairman PTI Imran Khan has demanded of the Supreme Court to take suo moto action against the minister.
In a statement Pakistan Tehreek-I-Insaf (PTI) leader Imran Khan Thursday condemned the statement of Defence Minister that 3,000 youths from Swat and other parts of the country are under detention without legal recourse.


He said findings of the Eisenhower Research Project based at Brown University has confirmed that the denial of fundamental human rights including access to legal course result in extensive violent response and terrorism against the civilian population caught between two opposing forces.
The PTI Chairman demanded that the Supreme Court should take suo moto action against the defence minister and ask him to provide details of the detained individuals and why they are being denied access to justice.

.........The study found that 40 percent of the 268 terror groups were eliminated through intelligence and policing methods; 43 percent ended their violence as a result of peaceful political accommodation; 10 percent ceased their violent activity because they had achieved their objectives (“victory”) by violence; and only 7 percent were defeated militarily.

The PTI Chief concluded that a political settlement of the war on terror is the only way forward to save Pakistan from further social and economic destruction.

Imran asks SC to take suo moto against Mukhtar | Pakistan | News | Newspaper | Daily | English | Online
 
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This is a very crucial time in the Pakistan history and the biggest problem at this stage is the anti democratic forces that are putting entire weight to derail democracy. Those who think Imran Khan as best option should not forget that Just like other family and ethnic Mafia bosses, Imran’s hart, his love of his life and children are raised in London, for whatever the reason it may. He stays in the mansion of his mother-in-law and conduct interviews with the international press and also a regular speaker of the American and Western “Stink Tanks” for money, what ever he does with that money does not change the fact that he is the part and parcel of the big scam of billionaire bankers and Neo-Satan’s of the world, who buy people like Imran Khan with the fees they pay for pretending to ’learn” from them. Why Imran did not go to jail and hid with his friends during the dictator’s rule and was turn in by the JI students to the police and used his wife’s influence in Europe to get of the Jail and did not stay there in protest of the dictatorship like Mandela did for his principals. These were the only PPP leaders who rendered even their lives for this country and democracy. The people like Imran Khan are just utopians.
 
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