|
It
has been said that the only thing that is permanent is change, and
the February 18 general elections were a clear reminder of that
truism. The day witnessed the collapse of a large number of political
heavyweights in the country, especially in the Punjab. The majority,
part of the ruling PML-Q, miserably failed to secure victory even
in their ancestral constituencies - some against not-so-powerful
opponents.
The
losers included some of the bigwigs of the country such as former
prime minister, Chaudhry Shujaat Hussain, the erstwhile Speaker
of the National Assembly Chaudhry Amir Hussain, and former ministers
Shaikh Rashid Ahmed, Rao Sikandar Iqbal, Khurshid Mahmood Kasuri,
Umer Ayub Khan and Humayun Akhtar Khan. Overall, this election purged
23 ministers of the previous government.
In
one of the major upsets, a strong contender for premiership, Punjab's
former chief minister Chaudhry Pervaiz Elahi, lost one of the two
constituencies from which he contested. Maulana Fazl-ur-Rahman of
the JUI-F tasted defeat when he lost his ancestral seat of Dera
Ismail Khan. This came as a shock, as the constituency has been
a stronghold of the Maulana since the 1970s when his father, Mufti
Mahmud, defeated Zulfikar Ali Bhutto. Another defeat that came as
a surprise was the fall of PPP's secretary general, Jahangir Badar
in Lahore. However, on the whole, his party surfaced as the winner.
A
staggering defeat faced by Chaudhry Shujaat Hussain, in his hometown
of Gujrat proved to be a shocker. In what is termed as the 'Clash
of the Chaudhries,' Shujaat lost to his arch-rival, PPP's Chaudhry
Ahmed Mukhtar, a former minister and owner of Service Industries.
Both Chaudhries have been contesting against each other from the
same constituency since 1990, with Shujaat winning almost each time,
except for 1993 when Mukhtar defeated him. This time Shujaat bagged
63,797 votes against Mukhtar's 77, 072.
Shujaat
followed in the footsteps of former PML-Q president, Mian Muhammad
Azhar, who lost his seat in the National Assembly in the 2002 elections.
But in a post-election statement, Shujaat conceded defeat and described
himself as being 'relieved.'
Former
railways minister and political astrologer Shaikh Rashid Ahmed,
who won from Rawalpindi for five consecutive terms, could not continue
his winning streak. Rawalpindi has been considered as the stronghold
of the PML-N since 1985, while Rashid was their favourite candidate.
However, in the 2002 elections, Rashid left the PML-N, campaigned
as an independent candidate, winning two seats. Later he joined
hands with the PML-Q and became the information minister.
On
February 18, he faced a humiliating defeat on both, NA-55 and NA-56
of Rawalpindi. He was a distant third and received only 10,000 votes
against the PML-N winner Hanif Abbasi, who obtained a whopping 73,
433 votes. While in NA-55, Rashid garnered 30,000 against PML-N
Makhdoom Javed Hashmi, a man revered by his party men for doing
jail time. Rashid has accepted defeat but has already predicted
fresh elections sometime in the near future. He considers Lal Masjid
and the wheat crisis as some of the major reasons for his defeat.
He also anticipates a "game of cat and mouse within three months."
Like
Rashid, another former close ally-turned-defector of Nawaz Sharif,
was the victim of the anti-Musharraf storm that hit the Punjab,
during the recent elections. Hamid Nasir Chattha, competing from
his hometown of Gujranwala, lost by a huge margin to his opponent,
Justice (retd.) Iftikhar Ahmed Cheema of the PML-N. Chattha left
Sharif in the early '90s and won the last elections from the platform
of the PML-J and later joined hands with the PML-Q. On February
18, this PML-Q candidate collected only 48,792 against Cheema's
71,715.
In
Okara, the person who once expressed "his ardent desire"
to "see President Musharraf as life-time president" of
the country was defeated by the PPP supported independent candidate,
Sajjad-ul-Hasan. Musharraf's personal friend and ex-defence minister,
Rao Sikandar Iqbal could garner only 33,533 votes against Hasan
who obtained 77,808 votes. During the 2002 elections when Iqbal
contested as a PPP candidate he won the same seat by a huge margin.
The central district of Jhang, home to many famous sufi saints,
witnessed the battle of two rivals once again. The sajjada nasheen
of Shah Jewana shrine, Faisal Saleh Hayat, who has a huge following
in the area, has been pitched against his cousin Syeda Abida Hussain
since the early '90s in the same constituency. This time Hussain,
contesting on a PPP ticket, again lost to Hayat, a PML-Q candidate
by a huge margin of 16,000 votes.
Interestingly, during the last elections, Hayat won the same seat
on a PPP ticket defeating Hussain, a PML-Q candidate. Hayat later
defected from the PPP to form the breakaway Patriots faction, joining
hands with the government. He served as the interior minister and
later as the minister for Kashmir and Northern Affairs.
Humayun Akhtar Khan, a multimillionaire, was another addition to
the list of losers. Son of former ISI chief, General Akhtar Abdur
Rahman, Khan once claimed that he could win from any constituency
in the country. But all his claims proved wrong when he obtained
a meagre 7,427 votes and stood third from a Lahore constituency.
PML-N candidate Sheikh Rohail Asghar emerged as the winner, with
62, 345 votes. Originally, NA-124 was the seat of PPP's Aitzaz Ahsan,
who won in 2002, but boycotted the recent elections. Prior to the
elections, Nawaz Sharif announced the withdrawal the PML-N candidate
contesting against Ahsan, to show solidarity with the lawyers' movement.
Known as the 'hafiz' of the constitution, Dr Sher Afgan Niazi, who
appeared on numerous talk shows on private channels, also lost to
an independent candidate, Humair Hayat Rokhari, by a narrow margin
of only 4,000 votes. Rokhari is not new to the political scene,
as other family members have been members of the lower and upper
house of the Parliament in the past. Niazi, who switched loyalties
to the PML-Q, after winning the 2002 elections on a PPP ticket,
was later made the minister of parliamentary affairs. Contesting
from his hometown of Mianwali, Niazi also had the support of the
local government given that his son is the local Nazim. Cricketer-turned-politician,
Imran Khan had also intended to contest from the same seat, but
he later announced his boycott of the elections. In post-election
developments, Rokhari has now joined the Pakistan Peoples Party.
But Niazi has not accepted defeat. The former minister has lodged
a complaint with the Election Commission, requesting for re-election
in his constituency. His claim is based on the grounds that his
opponent rigged the elections.
NA-140 of Kasur, also called FM-140 by many, was the centre of attraction
due to the clash of two former foreign ministers from the constituency.
Khurshid Mahmood Kasuri, winner of the 2002 elections from this
constituency lost to veteran politician, Sardar Asif Ahmed Ali of
PPP. This is going to be Sardar Asif's fourth term in the National
Assembly. He received 41,549 against Kasuri who obtained 32,083
votes.
Another minister that fell prey to the anti-Musharraf drive was
Ejaz-ul-Haq, who lost his seat of NA-191 of Bahawalnagar. A huge
migrant population of the Arain biradari in the area have always
ensured his victories. Haq, a former head of PML-Zia, merged his
party with the PML-Q after winning the last elections. He served
as the minister of religious affairs in the previous government.
However, his image took a beating after the Lal Masjid operation
and his massive 79, 240 votes couldn't match the winning total of
83,935 of his opponent, Muhammad Fazal Sandhu of the PPP. Recent
reports show that Ejaz-ul-Haq is reviewing his affiliation with
the PML-Q and might revive his 'Zia-ul-Haq' faction of the PML.
NA-116 in Narowal witnessed the fall of another stalwart, Chairman
of the National Reconstruction Bureau, Danyal Anwar Aziz, who lost
to an independent candidate Muhammad Tariq Anees. This was considered
Aziz's family seat, as his father Chaudhry Anwar Aziz had won from
this seat during the 1985 and 1988 elections. In the last elections
Aziz, a contender of the PML-Q, had defeated Anees. However, this
time his 35,000 votes fell short of Anees's winning total of 42,000.
Surprisingly, Aziz has held his party's 'Gujrat mafia' responsible
for his defeat. He claims that as he never 'lauded the Chaudhrys
of Gujrat,' they supported his opponent and massively rigged it.
Aziz has also requested the Election Commission for re-polling in
his constituency.
Among other big losers was the former minister of state for overseas
Pakistanis Division, Muhammad Raza Hayat Hiraj, who contested from
the upper house for the first time in 2002 on a PPP ticket, defeating
his family-rival, Syed Fakhar Imam of the PML-Q. NA-156 of Khanewal
has been a witness to the confrontation between the Syeds and the
Hirajs since the 1985 elections. A barrister by profession, Hiraj,
along with Faisal Saleh Hayat and others, later formed a separate
faction called the PPP-Patriots. Subsequently, the group joined
the PML-Q, under the leadership of Rao Sikander Iqbal.
In the recent elections, both Hiraj and Imam switched sides. However,
the change of parties didn't affect the results of this constituency.
Hiraj, once again, defeated Fakhar Imam. The anti-Shia vote plays
a crucial role in the area, which usually goes to the Hiraj family.
The winner garnered a massive 71,225 votes against the runner-up's,
58,452 votes.
Last but not the least, who can forget the former law minister Wasi
Zafar? This Faisalabad MNA of the PML-Q won his first elections
in 2002, defeating the PML-N candidate. In the post March scenario,
Zafar gained notoriety for mishandling the chief justice's issue,
and using abusive language during a live television broadcast. This
led to a change in his portfolio as he was later made minister of
privatisation. Months before this defeat, Zafar got a real shock
when he failed to obtain a National Assembly ticket from the higher-ups
of the PML-Q. He took part as an independent candidate and finished
a distant third, receiving a paltry 16,121 votes against the PPP
winner Malik Nawab Sher Waseer, who got 42,281 votes.
The 2008 elections have indeed, changed the political scenario -
not only within the PML-Q but throughout the country - as new alignments
are now taking place. It is, perhaps, time for the PML-Q to institute
an internal assessment to take stock of the situation in the aftermath
of the recent elections. The party needs to examine the standing
of the various claimants within the party and their public image
and acceptability among the masses.
|