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Mush’s new political party closer to reality

Fighter488

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Mush’s new political party closer to reality


Islamabad: The Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) has reportedly accepted former president general Pervez Musharraf ’s application to register a new political party named All Pakistan Muslim League (APML), thus clearing the road for Musharraf to return to the country for another political stint.

Sources privy to the development said Musharraf was trying hard to register the party through some of his loyalists in the country for quite some time, and has now finally succeeded.

Commenting on the reports regarding Musharraf staging a comeback, major general (retired) Rashid Qureshi, while confirming that barrister Saif was serving as a legal advisor and spokesman of Musharraf, said the former premier has still not decided to join the newly floated party. ANI


TOI Feed. Date 20th March 2010
 
Is this news FACTUAL or just a wild guess by media, here in India?

Pakistani members can through some light here.

Fighter
 
Credit should be given to Barrister Saif and Sher Afghan Khan Niazi. They are the only ones who haven't left his side.

Although his "political" comeback would be as miserable as PTI's performance in NA 55
 
as far as finding ppl is concerned, he will find many. there are few in Q league who will join his party. and few other.
but will they be able to get enough public on their side? lets see
 
wth man cant they come with some new names

how about the democrates ? the republicans ? or in musharraf's case the jarheads
 
He will try to get some influential people from pmlq ppp and pmln in his party
and may be his party will win some seats from punjab
 
So this is what I have so far:

All Pakistan Muslim League will be headed by Barrister Saif.

Gen. Musarraf will not hold a position in the party, however, he will be a leader of the party.

The youth wing of this party is Pasdar-e-Pakistan.

Pasdar e Pakistan

:pakistan:
 
This is interesting that the former dictator and his aides, Barrister Saif, Sher of gan(d) Niazi, Lala Nisaar, corrupt Naseem Asharaf, and Gaali-baaz Quershi could come up with not other name but Muslim League suggesting the intellectual emptiness (zahni aflaas) of these folks. Following is an interesting article on the creation of this yet another Muslim League; read and enjoy.

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^^^^English khwan kahan samjhaiN ge yeh adbi tehreer.

Any way, I can't get indeed, what are they up to. These people had a god like control over this country for nearly two terms and what they did is history.

My question;

1- will they be able to have such control over the country as they had before?

If yes, how?

And if they come to power again then;

Do they have a unique program for the nation? (they even can't coin a new name for the party)

If yes, how they are going to impliment it (they were utter failure in past).

I have some different feeling behind this aparently political move (and this feeling is due to the presence of Saif and Sher Afgan). They are trying to save Musharaf's skin, nothing else.
 
An old but relevant article. Should be re read;



Judging Musharraf by his own criteria



Thursday, August 21, 2008
By Mosharraf Zaidi

Celebrating Pervez Musharraf's resignation should be no more than a fleeting indulgence for people who are seriously interested in Pakistan's future. In October of 1999, Musharraf stole Pakistan from the people, ostensibly for the people. It is not that long ago that the punditry of Pakistan was in love with the dog-owning, mullah-bashing, straight-talking chocolaty hero. It took five flawed elections (referendum '01, local '01, general '02, local '05, general '08), the uprooting of the social order of the tribal areas, the systematic defacement of the judiciary, and the unprecedentedly self-worshipping book that he wrote before Musharraf-Hero turned into Musharraf-Villain.

In his strategic blindness, Musharraf was a Miandad-esque political figure, never able to see past the next quick single. Tactically, however, Musharraf was brilliant to the bitter end. Nothing anyone else did mattered. Musharraf has retired hurt. He has resigned. He has not been impeached, not bowled out, not caught out, or run out, or even stumped. The jubilance should be tempered by that fact alone. Musharraf has given Pakistan back to the people on his own terms. To be fair to him, there is no doubt that his love for Pakistan is deep and sincere. To be fair to the people of Pakistan though, there should be no doubt that patriotism is no qualification to play Russian roulette with a poor country. He will probably get away with the laws he broke. But nothing can repair the hearts he broke.

It was his flirtations with the law that eventually did him in. The lawyers movement is the most credible and powerful nail in the Musharraf presidency's coffin. It would be unrealistically romantic to think that it was political parties that managed to squeeze Musharraf out of power. Though Nawaz Sharif should be feted for his growth as a politician and his maturity as an emerging statesman, before the lawyers' movement, the PML (N) had been reduced to a shadow of itself. And while the Shaheed Mohtarma is a martyr in the truest sense of the word, the tragedy suffered by the Zardari-Bhutto clan does not neutralise the depressing fact that Pakistan's largest party is co-chaired by a teenager who's hardly ever lived in Pakistan.

The truth is that if he wanted to, Musharraf could have dragged this out further. That fact is the true legacy of his eight years in the saddle. That one man's tunnel-vision and exaggerated sense of purpose can drive a country so deeply out of whack that even a genuine people's movement had no chance of succeeding. That is how badly the Musharraf era has damaged Pakistani institutions. Pakistanis should prepare for a long and painful period of rehabilitation.

The severity of the challenge is best measured by Musharraf's own megalomaniacal rhetoric. In his meandering and pathetic resignation speech, Musharraf expressed pride over his achievements. The definition of an achievement is doing what one sets out to do. Pervez Musharraf began his coup with a seven-point agenda, announced on October 17, 1999. Exactly eight years and ten months later, let's take a quick look at what exactly has been "achieved".

The seven point agenda included, "Rebuild national confidence and morale", "Strengthen the federation, remove inter-provincial disharmony and restore national cohesion", "Devolution of power to the grass roots level", "Revive the economy and restore investor confidence", "Ensure law and order and dispense speedy justice", "Depoliticise state institutions", and "Ensure swift and across the board accountability".

Only the most audaciously ill-informed can claim that these agenda items have been achieved. On devolution, supporters of the former General would say that he indeed was able to create local governments. Unfortunately, although local governments seem to have been established for good, the manner in which they were shoved down the throats of the provinces was counter-productive. Perhaps even more importantly, by stripping the bureaucracy of its regulatory role at the grassroots level, devolution made a mortal enemy from day one, the District Management Group (DMG). Not only has the DMG suffered as a result, but Pakistan has too, losing hundreds of its brightest civil servants to foreign universities, donor agencies and multilateral organisations. In the end, the elite bureaucracy always wins. The DMG will have their day and their way with the Local Government Ordinances, weakening an already fragile local government setup and reinforcing its own powers.

The other area in which Musharraf might think he has a case to make for success is the reviving of the economy. For certain, all the bankers in shiny suits from whom he took advice seem convinced about the brilliance of their economic model. Since Musharraf's emergency, the stock market lost over $30 billion in market cap, the foreign reserves shrunk by about half, inflation is now flirting with the 20% threshold and investor confidence is in tatters. Those advisers then have some audacity then to suggest that the fundamentals are strong. The truth is that while the middle class did indeed expand during the Musharraf era, this had more to do with capital injections after 9/11, than it did with good policy. Most crucially, since 9/11 Pakistan grew not because of the paltry $10 billion that Congress sneezed into Pakistan, but rather the consistently growing remittances from hardworking Pakistanis all over the world. At last count, since 2001 cumulative remittances are at least double what the Americans have provided in aid. Those remittances drove a real estate explosion, and helped banks fuel unprecedented consumption for Pakistanis who grew up on Fauji cornflakes and Pakistan Steel widgets. Of course they would consume their way into a serious current account imbalance. Managing all of this would have been a real achievement for Musharraf. Instead, his advisers have deserted him, and gone back to their real jobs: selling used cars to the next gullible "investor".

The rest of the items on the seven point agenda have not only not been achieved, they have actually regressed. National confidence is bruised by unprecedented terrorism and deprivation. The military brand, once the blue-chip jewel of the Pakistani ethos, has been politicised and monetised. National cohesion has gone to the dogs, with terrorists having a field day while progressive Pakistanis are under siege for being bold and beautiful, and practicing Muslims in Pakistan under siege for being bearded and veiled. The provinces are sick of being treated like children, with a federal government constantly expanding and crowding out the provinces. Pakhtun children wonder why their land is an acronym, while Baluch children wonder why only the warlords get a share of the gas royalties. Punjabi children grow up wondering why everybody outside the Punjab has a chip on their shoulder and Sindhi children don't grow up as Sindhis, but rather as members of the rural or urban quota. The tenuous link between the tribes of FATA and the federation has been fatally wounded. Accountability has become a punch line, with Musharraf mocking his agenda by forcing the incorruptible General Amjad to resign as NAB Chairman in 2001, and capping the mockery with promulgating the National Reconciliation Ordinance in 2007.

Did some good things happen during Musharraf's era? Sure, they did, but good things happen in every era. Most of the time, its not the state establishment that makes them happen, it is the incomparably resilient people of Pakistan. Indians that come to Pakistan don't go back singing the praises of Customs officers or the PIA, they go back singing the praises of the people. Afghans who were once refugees here don't speak warmly of the Pakistani state, but they cry tears of love in remembering their real hosts, their Pakistani brothers. The resilient and generous Pakistani people deserve something better than what they keep getting from both the dictators that select themselves and the politicians that get elected.

The current ruling politicians can prove they mean business and that they will never allow another dictator the grounds to delegitimise them again. To do so, they have to restore the judiciary, scrap the NRO, tear up the concurrent list, give the provinces their constitutional rights, and rename the NWFP. They must do so quickly. Time is a wasting.



The writer is an independent political economist. Email: mosharraf@gmail.com

http://www.thenews.com.pk/print1.asp?id=131070
 
as far as finding ppl is concerned, he will find many. there are few in Q league who will join his party. and few other.
but will they be able to get enough public on their side? lets see

Well if our mindset has been changed from fedualism and familycracy then indeed they can score well but i dont think so because we are slaves of fedualism of Bhuttos and gunjas and so on.
 
^^^^English khwan kahan samjhaiN ge yeh adbi tehreer.
Khalid Bhai, have you read Comrade? I wish we had someone like Moulana Muhammed Ali Jouhar who could put down classical work in English.

As far as former dictator and his wet dreams are concerned, they are bound to fail; his deeds (siah kartoot) will follow him like a ghost every where.
 
Khalid Bhai, have you read Comrade? I wish we had someone like Moulana Muhammed Ali Jouhar who could put down classical work in English.

Ab dhondo unhaiN charagh e rukhe zeba lay ker
 

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