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In
an ironic change of fortune, Afaq Ahmed Khan, chief of the breakaway
faction of the Mohajir Qaumi Movement, the Haqiqi group, was arrested
in the early hours of the morning on April 3 in Karachi. For 16
months he had been dodging the same security forces that orchestrated
his and his small band of militants' victorious parade into the
city on June 19, 1992 in official vehicles, and who patronised his
party for almost a decade.
From
wanted MQM militant to the establishment's protegé to prisoner
facing scores of criminal charges, Khan's roller coaster political
career is a telling saga of how our security establishment and its
agencies often create, use, and then unceremoniously, often callously,
dump politicians, workers and militants alike. Afaq Ahmed Khan -
a man from a lower middle class Karachi family - is a prime example
of such machinations.
In
the typical fashion of Pakistani politics, the establishment of
the time tried to reconstruct Karachi's political structure, setting
the stage for one of the bloodiest eras in Karachi's history, during
which thousands of people were killed. Khan's small faction of the
MQM Haqiqi was cobbled together by the authorities in the early
'90s by galvanising dissidents of the mainstream Mohajir Qaumi Movement,
considered at that point to be the biggest security risk by the
agencies and police alike.
With
the launch of 1992's notorious operation clean-up against the Altaf
Hussain-led original MQM, the MQM Haqiqi seized key neighbourhoods
seen as the power-base of "mohajir politics" backed by
security personnel.
Within
hours, the MQM (Altaf) group had been displaced - even if just temporarily
- albeit only to be replaced by the MQM Haqiqi whose credentials
and modus operandi were equally, if not more suspect than its parent
organisation's. In the dark years that followed - under former premiers
Nawaz Sharif and Benazir Bhutto - hit-and-run killings, kidnappings,
deaths by torture and extra-judicial executions by law-enforcement
agencies became the order of the day, as the two factions of the
MQM slugged it out on Karachi's streets and the establishment went
for the MQM (Altaf)'s jugular.
Though the party was badly shaken and jolted, lost many of
its front-line leaders and was even forced to change its name to
the Muttahida Qaumi Movement on July 27, 1997, it survived the onslaught
because of its grassroots support and massive organisational network.
Nonetheless, all the while it remained out of official favour,
even as the establishment turned a blind eye to the Haqiqi group's
antics, which included the violation of virtually every rule of
law.
However, while neighbourhoods including Landhi, Malir, and
for several years Lines Area and Liaquatabad remained under the
control of the Haqiqi group, despite the best efforts of the establishment
of that time and the group's attempts to enter into alliances with
other parties - including hard-line Sunni Muslim groups - they failed
to win any popular support and performed poorly in the elections.
Status quo continued for several years, but after the coup
of October 1999, the new government launched an initiative to halt
the cycle of violence between the two rival groups. However the
MQM (Altaf) was still not seen to be trustworthy enough to be allowed
a free hand in the city. And when the MQM boycotted the local elections,
the Jamaat-e-Islami-backed local government filled the void.
A
gradual change in fortunes for the Haqiqi began following the October
2002 general elections, in which the MQM (Altaf) - despite some
upsets - dominated the urban areas of Sindh, while the Haqiqi managed
to win only a lone provincial assembly seat.
Direly in need of the MQM (Altaf)'s support to bolster its
position, the government did an about-turn and started turning the
screws on its protege. In the first phase of this change of policy,
the Haqiqi offices were shut down and a crackdown on its militants
was launched. Soon after, it apparently dawned on the administration
that the famous White House or Bait-ul Hamza in Landhi - the Haqiqi
headquarters - was an illegal construction. Bulldozers and workers
moved to pull it down, as the top brass of the Haqiqi went into
hiding.
According
to sources, the authorities offered top leaders a safe passage out
of the country. However, Afaq Khan refused the offer, apparently
in the misplaced belief that his utility for the establishment was
not over.
Meanwhile, the MQM (Altaf), part of the federal government
as well as the major coalition partner in Sindh's provincial government,
kept the pressure up on the establishment to take the Haqiqi leadership
to task and completely wind up the group's operations, failing which
it threatened to pull out of the government.
Finally,
in a slow-paced operation, the police arrested more than 750 Haqiqi
workers and leaders before ultimately throwing the dragnet around
Afaq Ahmed Khan.
"Had the top leaders
of the party been arrested in the first swoop, it would have meant
trouble in the city," said a police official. "So the
government strategists went for party supporters first. And as we
saw, there was hardly a violent reaction to Afaq's arrest."
With Khan's arrest a long-standing demand of the MQM had finally
been accepted. Following this, Altaf Hussain, the MQM's self-exiled
leader, announced clemency for MQM dissidents who had joined the
Haqiqi group and their families, and urged his workers not to target
them.
Does this mean the turf war between the MQM (Altaf) and the
MQM Haqiqi is over? For the time being it seems to be. As long as
the MQM (Altaf)'s alliance with the government lasts, Afaq Ahmed
Khan and his men are likely to stay in the safe custody of prison.
But given the vagaries and quirks of Pakistani politics, this honeymoon
could end in a blink. Meanwhile, the now resuscitated MQM (Altaf)
should make the best use of this time, and the opportunity presented
it to make amends for the past. It may not be able to undo the damage
done, but it can contribute substantially to bring peace to the
beleaguered city of Karachi and the urban areas of Sindh.
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