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They are actors, not politicians. But while campaigning to bolster
support for themselves in the October polls, they tell the people
they have no vices - rhetoric which makes them sound suspiciously
like politicians.
Still, they attract crowds. People are familiar with their
faces and voices. The question is, will their fans vote for them?
For these actors are now aspiring for perhaps their greatest roles
ever - that of Parliamentarians.
"I have been telling people to discard tried and tested politicians,
and I am getting a good response," said actor Syed Kamal, who
is contesting on a Tehrik-e-Insaf ticket from Karachi.
Karachi is the only city in Pakistan where three film and television
actors are in the running for three separate National Assembly seats.
The senior-most among them is Kamal, vying for the National Assembly
seat 250.
The other two - Mohammed Shafi and Qaiser Nizamani - have each been
awarded a PPP ticket, now of course going by the name Pakistan People's
Party Parliamentarian (PPPP). While this is Kamal's third stint
as an electoral candidate, for the other two, this is their first
ever election bid.
Kamal tried his luck in the non-party elections of 1984 for a National
Assembly seat from Karachi's Federal B. Area, but lost by a huge
margin. In 1988, he again jumped into the election fray, contesting
for a Provincial Assembly seat from Defence Housing Authority and
its adjoining neighbourhoods, but he lost again. On both these occasions,
he ran as an independent candidate.
"I never applied for a party ticket earlier because none of
the political parties attracted me," Kamal told Newsline. "But
the Tehrik -e-Insaf has come out with a pro-peoples' manifesto -
fighting corruption, introducing judicial reforms and equal education
opportunities for all," he said, explaining his decision to
align with a party this time. "In the past I used to entertain
people, now I want to serve them through politics," he added.
However, it is not likely to be smooth sailing for Kamal, who has
been pitted against the Muttahida Qaumi Movement's heavyweight,
Nasreen Jalil. And then the PPPP candidate, Ikhtiar Baig, who is
aspiring for the same seat, is investing substantial resources and
money on his candidature.
Shafi Mohammed, who is running from NA 253 comprising Gulshan-e-Iqbal
and its adjacent areas, faces tough competition from the Muttahida
Qaumi Movement's Professor Fahimuddin. For Mohammed too, it is likely
to be a tough call since the MQM has been dominating elections on
this seat since 1988. Undeterred he contended, "I am getting
a good response from all the communities." Certainly Mohammed
has been both, a familiar and popular face on television since the
1980s.
Mohammed, who is a long-time supporter of the PPP, tried to get
a PPP ticket in 1988 from his hometown of Naushero Feroze, but was
refused. This time he says he got lucky. And he hopes to be able
to extend his luck further by winning his seat. "The focus
of my election campaign is the problems faced by the people of Karachi,"
said Mohammed.
Qaiser Nizamani, the youngest of the three actors, is trying his
luck from NA 251 comprising PECHS-Mehmoodabad, where the MQM has
awarded a ticket to Safanullah, a businessman. While the prospect
of a face-off with the latter is daunting, Nizamani maintained,
"This time the situation is different. The redemarcation of
the constituency and the joint electorate system will favour the
PPPP."
Pakistani actors seem to have taken cues from the impressive electoral
performances of their counterparts in neighbouring India. "People
never used to take actors seriously in politics, but now things
have started to change," Kamal said.
It is not, however, the first time Pakistani actors are trying their
luck in the political field. Actor-compere Tariq Aziz managed to
sail to the Parliament on a Pakistan Muslim League ticket in 1997.
This time he is out of the electoral contest because of the graduation
clause for candidates which has closed the doors to electoral politics
for many aspirants. Mussarat Shaheen, the one-time heroine of sizzling
Pashtu films and a candidate in past elections (among them once
when her chief competitor was the JUI's Maulana Fazlur Rehman),
is also out of the race because of the graduation condition. Actor
Mustafa Qureshi, meanwhile, an ardent PPP supporter, also tried
for a ticket for a Provincial Assembly seat from Karachi, but he
was dropped in favour of an old PPPP local leader.
Whatever the outcome in the elections for the actors turned politicians,
with many of their friends from the film and television industry
promising to support them - indeed Lollywood stars Shaan, Deeba,
Bahar, Rangeela etc., are already making tracks to Karachi to rustle
up support for Kamal - the election campaigns in their constituencies
are likely to generate some colour. And it's certainly sorely needed
in this lacklustre contest.
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