Of the people,
for the people and by the people, were what the local
bodies elections were touted to be. What the establishment
conjured up, however, took even the most cynical by
surprise. Their ham-handed wizardry propelled rigging
to a new realm, where even some federal ministers echoed
the opposition's refrain and accused their own party
leaders of cooking the ballots.
That the fledgling blade of "grass roots democracy"'
was never meant to flourish, was corroborated by none
other than General Musharraf himself. First, when he
took to the campaign trail to canvas for his chosen
candidates and then, when he phoned Altaf Hussain to
congratulate him on the MQM's victory. Perhaps, the
General can still fool some of the people some of the
time, but the days of fooling all of the people all
of the time, are long gone.
Meanwhile,
on the shores of the Bosphorus, Foreign Minister Kasuri
made a controversial rendezvous with history and returned
home with some "good news". Evidently, Pakistan's
"growing stature in the international community"
can play a key role in solving the long-festering Palestinian
issue. The government claimed that the Kasuri-Shalom
meeting in Istanbul was the first step in that direction.
Interestingly, the Palestinians made it crystal clear
that they thought otherwise. And so, the plot thickens.
In
yet another historical first, the General is all geared
up to become the first Muslim leader to address the
American Jewish Congress, in an inspired move to promote
inter-faith peace and harmony. All very commendable,
noble and, no doubt, kosher. However, global accolades
aside, there is the small, but urgently pending, matter
of the fate of the beleaguered people of Pakistan.
We have long grown weary of the monotonous rhetoric
and the slick sound bytes that are long on promises,
but pitifully short on delivery. We all know that you
can talk the talk. Now it's time to walk the walk.