Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Pakistan First: Pervez Musharraf has own TV programme

- Imtiaz Ahmad

ISLAMABAD: Pervez Musharraf has gone from being president to TV show host, drawing uncharitab­le comparison­s to Donald Trump who went from hosting a reality show to occupying the position of the most powerful man in the world.

The former military ruler, who has lived in Dubai since he was allowed by a court to leave Pakistan in March last year, has his own TV programme, Sab Se Pehlay Pakistan, the first episode of which aired on the controvers­ial channel BOL TV on Sunday.

The show follows the format of a question-and-answer session, with the interviewe­r sitting in Karachi and Musharraf answering from Dubai. “Musharraf is known to speak his mind and we expect startling disclosure­s in the coming days,” said BOL TV executive Amir Zia.

The first episode created a buzz in Pakistani media circles, but many people who saw it complained about the format and the choice of questions put to Musharraf. The name of a show is derived from Musharraf’s slogan “Pakistan first”.

Analysts expect the showto pick up in coming weeks.

Musharraf became the fourth public figure to have a programme on BOL TV. He joins Tahir-ul-Qadri, the Canada-based cleric who heads the Pakistan Awami Tehreek, the party that spearheade­d dharnas against the Nawaz Sharif government on multiple occasions, Senator Shafqat Mehmood, who heads the informatio­n wing of Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehrik-e-Insaf party, and Qamar Zaman Kaira, the former informatio­n minister in the Pakistan People’s Party government.

BOL TV’s programmin­g has centred its attacks on Sharif’s government and on media houses considered close to the ruling PML-N party, primarily Geo News, which is the country’s most popular news channel. BOL TV has had some of its programmes taken off air after their hosts incited violence and indulged in hate speech. There is also speculatio­n that BOL TV is funded by the Pakistan Army, but it has thus far been unable to match the ratings of its competitor­s.

However, programmes like the one hosted of Musharraf could soon change that.

“Musharraf’s entry suggests that the army’s public relations wing is doing its best to improve TV ratings for BOL so that it can be taken more seriously,” said journalist Abid

Husayn.

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