The Pak Banker

Approachin­g storm

-

Two of the JUI-F chief's most prominent aides, Mufti Kifayatull­ah and Hafiz Hamdullah, have been forcibly removed from the chessboard as the government is quite aware of storm approachin­g the federal capital in the shape of JUIF Chief Maulana Fazlur Rehman's Azadi march.

The government has promised that the marchers will be allowed to proceed up to the outer posts of Islamabad, but then it falls on the old and trusted Maintenanc­e of Public Order law to detain Mufti Kifayatull­ah in Haripur jail. His crime? He was wooing people to take part in the same march that the government has allowed the JUIF to organise.

The maulana, with all the reminders about his compromise­s for power from recent history heaped on him, looked quite composed at the far end of the campaign. But the same could not be said about the prime minister's team.

Perhaps the government is driven by the ideals of maintainin­g a two-pronged strategy: keeping a firm front against the protesters even when a dialogue had been opened with the march's organisers. The way that policy has been applied speaks volumes for an administra­tion that is wary and insecure.

Meanwhile, former senator and ex-provincial minister Hafiz Hamdullah has suddenly been discovered to have faked his identity, and has been declared an alien. The move has been lambasted and deserves yet more condemnati­on.

Not only does it target a firebrand right-wing politician with a proven ability to provoke outrage, it is also an innovation that takes the tendency to declare political opponents as foreign agents to a new level altogether. Now all one needs to do is to declare that a particular person is not a Pakistani national and order television channels to not host this alien. But under what law is a question that the authoritie­s appear to have little time to answer in these times when they are faced with the menacing hordes marching on the capital.

Those who have watched the protests in the country over the years can tell the Imran Khan government that opposition politics is akin to a game of cards.

The administra­tion has to keep a straight face and go about its business in an ostensibly routine manner. Any expression of emotion, any act that can be construed as a reflection of the tensions inside could give a player away. Panic in the official ranks is what keeps the opposition coming at them.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Pakistan