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Imran
Khan's choice of candidate for prime minister has left many of his
ardent fans, especially women, dumbfounded. The cricketer-turned-politician
voted for Maulana Fazlur Rehman, the Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal's nominee
for premier, against the advise of many liberal and progressive
members within his Tehrik-e-Insaaf (TI).
Imran used his solitary vote in parliament in Rehman's favour, forwarding
the argument that the MMA is the only political force that is independent
and does not take dictation from abroad. He maintained that he found
himself ideologically and politically close to the MMA, which denounces
President Pervez Musharraf's support to the international coalition
in the war against terrorism, especially in neighbouring Afghanistan.
"Khan has more than a soft corner for the ousted Afghan Taliban,"
a senior leader of his party said on the condition of anonymity.
"He thinks that the orthodox religious militia did a great
service to Afghanistan and Islam before they became a target of
the Americans."
Also, the MMA's firm stand against Musharraf, especially his series
of controversial constitutional amendments, won the heart of Pakistan's
former speedster, he added.
Imran's protracted bitterness towards the Pakistan Peoples' Party
and anger against the Pakistan Muslim League left him with no alternative
other than the MMA, which secured 86 votes, including those of the
Pakistan Muslim League (N).
Khan's vote for the pro-Taliban cleric has added to the political
confusion within his party, which performed poorly in the October
10 elections. "It would have been understandable, had Imran
voted for a candidate that was nominated jointly by the opposition,"
said a senior Tehrik-e-Insaaf leader. "But by voting for the
MMA, he most certainly has lost his standing among the liberal,
democratic and progressive elements in society."
Human rights groups and the majority of the moderate and liberal
Muslims have been extremely critical of the MMA's narrow interpretation
of Islam and the conservative views of its leaders on women, education,
fine arts, television and sports. By voting for the MMA, the Tehrik-e-Insaaf
chief has, in effect, endorsed the religious alliance's stand on
these issues as well.
Will the women's wing of the Tehrik-e-Insaaf, led by Jemima, Khan's
British-born wife, endorse the Taliban-like interpretation of Islam?
That remains a moot point.
Mairaj Mohammed Khan, the Tehrik-e-Insaaf's secretary general who
has spent a lifetime advocating socialism and secular politics,
finds it hard to defend the somersaults of the party leader, who
has drifted from one extreme (of being pro-Musharraf) to the other
extreme (of being anti-Musharraf) within a short span of time.
"Even we are finding it difficult to figure out the real Imran,"
quipped another of his Karachi-based leaders. "He dons the
shalwar-kameez and preaches desi and religious values while in Pakistan,
but transforms himself completely while rubbing shoulders with the
elite in Britain and elsewhere in the west."
Many in the Tehrik-e-Insaaf would have preferred to see Imran abstain
from the voting like the veteran Pakhtoonkhawa Milli Awami Party
leader Mahmood Khan Achakzai.
"But such political maturity is perhaps too much
to ask or expect of Imran," says a Karachi-based Tehrik-e-Insaaf
leader and a close aide of Mairaj Mohammed Khan's. "It is understandable
why people do not take Imran and his party seriously in politics,"
he said. "His self-righteousness and high-flying principles
fail to explain the contradiction between his strange fondness for
the maulanas and his passion for all the good things in life which
have come from the west.
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