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THE UPCOMING BATTLEGROUND: NA120 PMLN vs PTI

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SMOKERS’ CORNER: THE UPCOMING BATTLEGROUND
Nadeem F. ParachaAugust 06, 2017
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Illustration by Abro

Lahore’s NA-120 constituency is all set to hold a by-election after the Supreme Court recently dismissed Nawaz Sharif as prime minister. Five judges of the Supreme Court handed down a unanimous verdict against the former PM, finding him not worthy of holding the PM’s office because he had failed to mention a particular piece of information regarding his sources of income.

The verdict has had an intensely polarising impact in the country. That’s why the coming by-election of NA-120 — a constituency from where the dismissed PM had won his national assembly seat in 2013 — is already shaping up to become perhaps the most important post-2013 by-election.

During the 2013 election — which Sharif’s pro-business and increasingly centrist party, the PML-N had swept — Sharif defeated Dr Yasmeen Rashid of the populist PTI — the party headed by the charismatic former captain of the Pakistan cricket team and philanthropist Imran Khan.

The by-election in NA-120 will indicate which way the wind is blowing for the Sharifs

Nawaz had bagged 91,666 votes while Dr Rashid managed to attract an impressive 52,354 votes. It was a notable performance in a constituency which, for years, has been a Sharif/PML-N stronghold.

NA-120 was created in 2002 with the merger of Lahore’s former NA-95 constituency with parts of the city’s NA-96 constituency. Before the 1977 election, much of NA-95 was NW-60 Lahore 3. During the historic 1970 election, this area was won by the fiery chairman of the then left-wing PPP, Z.A. Bhutto, who received 78,132 votes. His closest rival was Dr Javed Iqbal, the son of poet and philosopher, Muhammad Iqbal. Javed Iqbal was contesting the election on a PML-Council ticket, a PML faction formed in 1962. He received 32,921 votes.

What is even more interesting is the fact that during the election for the 1970 provincial assembly seat of NW-60 (PA-73), M. Ghulam Nabi of the PPP swept to victory. Nabi was the future father-in-law of PTI’s Yasmeen Rasheed.

In the 1977 election, much of NA-60 Lahore 3 became NA-86. The PPP candidate M.M. Akhtar closely defeated a candidate of the anti-Bhutto alliance, the PNA. The 1977 elections were declared void by Gen Zia’s dictatorship which came to power through a coup in July 1977.

Partyless general elections’ were held in 1985 during the peak of Zia’s regime. The PPP-led anti-Zia alliance, the Movement for the Restoration of Democracy (MRD), boycotted the polls. The NA-86 constituency in these elections was won by the then 35-year-old Nawaz Sharif — a former member of Asghar Khan’s centrist Tehreek-i-Istaqlal but after 1979, a supporter of the Zia regime.

After his win, Nawaz became a member of the revamped Pakistan Muslim League (PML) which was formed under Zia’s patronage. Nawaz was then elected as chief minister of Punjab.

In her 1989 autobiography, Benazir Bhutto confessed that boycotting the 1985 elections was a mistake because it gave Nawaz Sharif the space to not only win his first election in Lahore but also create a constituency (as chief minister) for PML in the then largely pro-PPP Punjab.

However, a detailed analysis authored (in 1995) by Charles H. Kennedy and political scientist Professor Rasul B. Rais, suggested that the Zia regime (1977-88) overtly patronised the trader and business classes in Punjab and an emerging new petty bourgeoisie in the province. These classes became the early pillars of PML’s electoral support in the Punjab. This process saw the gradual erosion of the support that the PPP had enjoyed in the province till 1988.

During the 1988 election, NA-86 became NA-95. Nawaz defeated PPP’s Iqbal H. Bhatti. Nawaz contested on a PML ticket — which was part of the right-wing Islami Jamhoori Ittehad (IJI) alliance. He received 49,318 votes to Bhatti’s 36,065.

But NA-96 — part of which would also become NA-120 in 2002 — was won by PPP’s Jahangir Badar, who defeated Jamaat-i-Islami’s Hafiz Salman who was contesting on an IJI ticket. The PPP had also won the 1988 by-election here. The party then formed the first post-Zia government.

From 1990 till 2002, however, Nawaz and his brother Shahbaz continually won NA-95 and NA-96. In 1993, Nawaz broke away from IJI and then the PML to form his own faction, the PML-N. He twice became PM (1990 and 1997) before being toppled in a military coup in 1999.

In 2002, during Gen Musharraf’s regime, large parts of NA-95 and parts of NA-96 were combined to form the much larger NA-120. The Sharif brothers were in exile and their party was in disarray during the 2002 election. And though the party was routed in the election (winning just 19 seats), it still managed to win the largest number of seats in Lahore, including NA-120 and the PML-N’s Parvez Malik received 33,741 votes. PPP’s Altaf Ahmed Qureshi came second with 19,483 votes. PTI’s A. Rashid Bhatti could bag merely 2,526 votes.

The Sharif brothers, Nawaz and Shahbaz, returned to Pakistan in 2007 during the once popular and strong Musharraf regime’s weakening phase. In the 2008 election, Bilal Yasin was given the PML-N ticket by Nawaz to contest NA-120. He won by receiving 65,946 votes and the PPP’s Jahangir Badar came second with 24,380. However, the PPP won the overall 2008 election, riding on the sympathy wave created by Benazir’s tragic assassination in December 2007.

PPP briefly formed a coalition government with PML-N. But the coalition quickly fell apart after PPP’s co-chairperson Asif Ali Zardari refused to reinstate Chief Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry who was dismissed by Musharraf (on charges of corruption) in 2007. PPP then formed a wobbly coalition government with ANP and the MQM.

By 2013, PML-N’s ideological trajectory had increasingly shifted to the centre with the sudden and populist rise of the centre-right PTI. During the 2013 election, PTI replaced PPP as Punjab’s second-largest party, as PML-N swept Punjab and thus the overall election.

Nawaz became prime minister. Now his party will once again be facing Dr Rashid in the NA-120 by-election. Experts so far believe that PML-N would be able to defeat Dr Rashid, considering that NA-120 remains a Sharif/PML-N stronghold — and also due to the fact that a majority of voters here have been incensed at the manner PTI pushed for Nawaz’s ouster. On the other hand, PTI is confident that Dr Rashid, a popular figure in Lahore, would be able to improve upon her 2013 performance by also managing to bag whatever support left her for parties such as the PPP, the Jamaat-i-Islami and PML-Q.

Unlike most constituencies in Karachi which are multi-ethnic, Lahore’s constituencies are largely Punjabi. NA-120 is overtly urban in its make-up, with most of its inhabitants being businessmen, traders and white-collar workers. According to an April 21, 2013 report in The Nation, the literacy rate of this constituency is over 80 percent. There’s a large Shia community here as well. According to a May 2013 report in The News, the Shia and working-class votes in areas which make up NA-120 went to the PPP, but from 2002 onwards these votes began to move towards PML-N. The report added that the Shia vote here largely went to PTI during the 2013 election.

The result of this by-election is sure to determine the future course of the Sharif family after the PM’s ouster and the pressures that the family is facing from the courts.

Published in Dawn, EOS, August 6th, 2017
 
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NA-120: Eye of the storm
August 06, 2017
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Lahore - In Sanda, men gather outside biryani stalls at 11 am, hair slick with oil and grey chests dusted with prickly heat powder. A sleepy butcher hacks at chicken necks near the huge facade of a white tiled mosque and a dozen hair salons peeling with Johnny Depp posters. There are no trees, no green belts. But wily plants have shot up from the potholes leading to main Krishan Nagar Road, where the bazaars are closed on a Saturday morning except for a plastic shop selling pink water-coolers.



This is NA-120, a core power base for the Pakistan Muslim League and one of Pakistan’s most critical election battlegrounds. It is the former Lahore constituency of Nawaz Sharif, the now deposed prime minister whose disqualification on July 28th has led to a vacant seat in the lower house of Parliament. That seat is now vied with strongly by Punjab’s growing opposition party, the PTI, ahead of a by-election on September 17 which will be one of the most telling litmus tests of what lies ahead for politics in Pakistan.

“I haven’t decided who to vote for yet,” says Rana Abdul Rasheed, 75, who runs a junk shop in Sanda and says he’s too old for party alliances. “I voted for N-League last time, but I’m still undecided. If Shehbaz runs, maybe I’ll vote for him.”

By the looks of it, the younger Sharif will not be contesting for NA-120, and there are rumours that the candidacy might go instead to Nawaz’s daughter Maryam. PTI’s candidate Dr Yasmin Rasheed had fought for the slot in the 2013 elections and surprised skeptics by winning a record number of votes in that constituency against Nawaz. Even then, she was roughly 40,000 votes short.

Neon banners plastered with Nawaz Sharif’s face hang over the narrow alleyways around and off the main streets. Some of them refer to the recent Supreme Court judgement; freshly painted punchlines, all ending with “humara leader aiman-daar nikla” (Our leader turned out to be the honest one).

Still, many argue the PML-N stronghold is beginning to show cracks, and from preliminary interviews, it seems the undecided voters will base a good portion of their choice on who exactly the PML-N candidate turns out to be.

As he flips through hundreds of pages in his small paper shop in Urdu Bazaar, Arshad Siddique, 37, says, “I don’t know who will win but I can tell you what everyone around here is saying. If Shehbaz runs himself, they’ll win. But if Maryam or Begum Kulsoom or you or I contest, they’ll lose.”

The sentiment varies across the constituency.

Elsewhere in NA-120, around the packed commercial streets of Bilal Ganj, 57 year old Mumtaz Ahmad has set up shop selling batteries and soda from a near-death corner refrigerator.

“Nobody cares who runs from the PML-N,” he says, and waves us away. “In this place, everyone is an N-League supporter. It is the Muslim League, it is a party for people like us. For decent Muslims.”

A family strolling down Sardar Chappal Chowk says the same. “We don’t like Imran Khan’s guftagoo, the way he talks isn’t right,” says Fatima Shakir, 43. “We’ve always voted for N-League, for the decent man’s party, and we always will.”

Just off one of the few double roads in the constituency and sharing a wall with a PML-N women’s wing office, Mohammad Riaz, 48, sells cuttings of lace and fabric.

“Not much has changed here,” he says, in between stuffing a bag full of silver lace. “The sewage, the streetlights, nothing really. How will they fix anything for me anyway? They’ve got enough problems of their own.”

Outside mechanic shops, behind the beloved shrine of Data Sahib, men sit out in hoards smoking in the afternoon heat, their bodies golden against black heaps of motorcycle engines. A back alley is strung with car horns and side-view mirrors and there is not a single woman in sight.

“Why would I vote for anybody but PML-N?” laughs Mohammad Ayub, 35, a car mechanic. “All this disqualification stuff, it’s the will of God. Everyone has to face hardships in life. So what? It doesn’t change who gets our vote.”

Closer to the Lower Mall, the road starts to widen up. There is even a small public park near a hospital, from where the iconic single spire of the saint’s shrine rises above this part of the city.

In a small fabric shop, Fakhira Khalid, 40, says she will vote for PTI this time. “We want to try them out,” she says. “Me and my whole family. We used to vote for Nawaz but there’s been a change around this place. We weren’t like this, but now we want to try something new.”

Ahead of Nawaz’s arrival in Lahore, old campaign posters tangled up in the electricity wires over the constituency will be getting a full makeover. For the next few weeks, the narrow streets of NA-120 with its tight brick homes, its tea stalls and makeshift businesses will become the epicentre of political excitement. And the victory Nawaz will want for his party, more than all else.

“Not much has changed here,” he says, in between stuffing a bag full of silver lace. “The sewage, the streetlights, nothing really. How will they fix anything for me anyway? They’ve got enough problems of their own.”

Outside mechanic shops, behind the beloved shrine of Data Sahib, men sit out in hoards smoking in the afternoon heat, their bodies golden against black heaps of motorcycle engines. A back alley is strung with car horns and side-view mirrors and there is not a single woman in sight.

“Why would I vote for anybody but PML-N?” laughs Mohammad Ayub, 35, a car mechanic. “All this disqualification stuff, it’s the will of God. Everyone has to face hardships in life. So what? It doesn’t change who gets our vote.”

Closer to the Lower Mall, the road starts to widen up. There is even a small public park near a hospital, from where the iconic single spire of the saint’s shrine rises above this part of the city.

In a small fabric shop, Fakhira Khalid, 40, says she will vote for PTI this time. “We want to try them out,” she says. “Me and my whole family. We used to vote for Nawaz but there’s been a change around this place. We weren’t like this, but now we want to try something new.”

Ahead of Nawaz’s arrival in Lahore, old campaign posters tangled up in the electricity wires over the constituency will be getting a full makeover. For the next few weeks, the narrow streets of NA-120 with its tight brick homes, its tea stalls and makeshift businesses will become the epicentre of political excitement. And the victory Nawaz will want for his party, more than all else.

This news was published in The Nation newspaper. Read complete newspaper of 06-Aug-2017
here.
 
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A family strolling down Sardar Chappal Chowk says the same. “We don’t like Imran Khan’s guftagoo, the way he talks isn’t right,” says Fatima Shakir, 43. “We’ve always voted for N-League, for the decent man’s party, and we always will.”

:o::o:



:pakistan::pakistan::pakistan:

 
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It's irony we as a nation are so dumb that we are not ready to see the truth, what is wrong what is right we hell care about that, what we are doing, trying our best to defend the wrong doings of our favorite by knowing that it's wrong but still don't want to accept the harsh bitter truth.

"Everyone is seeing the mistake from his side, but no one is ready to see what the mistake is?" as a nation we are dead, hell about national interest we see our own interest first, we put over interests first in the line, and national interests are going to become the last thing to do.

Our leader is corrupt it's fine he looted the money but also spent few pennies for development, if we caught a small thief we beat him until he is dead. Why two different results for the same crime?
 
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A family strolling down Sardar Chappal Chowk says the same. “We don’t like Imran Khan’s guftagoo, the way he talks isn’t right,” says Fatima Shakir, 43. “We’ve always voted for N-League, for the decent man’s party, and we always will.”

:o::o:



:pakistan::pakistan::pakistan:

Jahalat of the highest order
 
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People are afraid to talk against the mafia ring lord , if they have business in region they are afraid to say anything negative due to fear of damage to their business interest or fines and if they live their they want

"No Trouble" from goons , turning off their electricity or water or other harassment tactics



dirtytown.jpg

badshahat.jpg




People are afraid of the King and Monarchy establishment enforcers
There is no democracy in Pakistan
 
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It's irony we as a nation are so dumb that we are not ready to see the truth, what is wrong what is right we hell care about that, what we are doing, trying our best to defend the wrong doings of our favorite by knowing that it's wrong but still don't want to accept the harsh bitter truth.

"Everyone is seeing the mistake from his side, but no one is ready to see what the mistake is?" as a nation we are dead, hell about national interest we see our own interest first, we put over interests first in the line, and national interests are going to become the last thing to do.

Our leader is corrupt it's fine he looted the money but also spent few pennies for development, if we caught a small thief we beat him until he is dead. Why two different results for the same crime?

mental slavery is the worst form .........
 
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Some PTI voters-to-be might not like to identify them as such for fear of repercussions.
 
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“Nobody cares who runs from the PML-N,” he says, and waves us away. “In this place, everyone is an N-League supporter. It is the Muslim League, it is a party for people like us. For decent Muslims.

“Why would I vote for anybody but PML-N?” laughs Mohammad Ayub, 35, a car mechanic. “All this disqualification stuff, it’s the will of God. Everyone has to face hardships in life. So what? It doesn’t change who gets our vote.”

Closer to the Lower Mall, the road starts to widen up. There is even a small public park near a hospital, from where the iconic single spire of the saint’s shrine rises above this part of the city.

To put it in no uncertain terms, وڑ گۓ بھای
 
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mental slavery is the worst form .........
Yes Indeed, hum Azad qaoum hain ju k zehni toor per mehkum hai.

We don't have trust in ourself to test and see the results we are afraid of trying new things. We always wait for someone else should try first and after that, we will see. The first one who goes from the test get the most of that.
 
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I'm guessing these jahils think the party with 'muslim' in it's name must be the party for decent people. What jokers.
 
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In most countries of world 2 entities cannot have closely resembling names of political party , however pakistan has 4-5 versions of Muslim League

And most cases , these entities all have nothing connected the pre partition muslim league.

People have subconsious "fear" of retalition if they vote against the goons

a) Will they hurt my business
b) Will they harass me , turn off electricity , turn off water supply , mess with my phone connections
c) Will my business get a illegal operation notice
d) Will I get assigend a corrupt police man who will come daily to harass me for bribes or free food
e) Why should I try to be a hero , I can be a slave and happy with a meaningless existance as long as
there is food for 3 meals every day
f) Why should it botherme if Nawaz or his family steal money from me , it is Bank's money
 
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NAWAZ SHARIF,S POLITIC,S

looking for trouble, finding it everywhere, diagnosing it incorrectly, and applying the wrong remedies."

AND MAYBE...If ignorance goes to forty dollars a barrel, I want drilling rights to NAWAZ SHARIFs head.
 
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