The Pak Banker

Imran Khan’s resurrecti­on

- Pervez Hoodbhoy

Liberal commentato­rs, once maligned by Imran Khan as “liberal scum” and “bloody liberals”, have neverthele­ss been fair-minded and have rightly criticised the Feb 8 elections as heavily managed.

They are part of a growing chorus alleging unfair exclusion of Khan and his PTI. True enough, but so what? Wasn’t that heavy management equally evident in the 2018 elections when Khan rode to power on the coattails of those who later dumped him?

Of course, two wrongs cannot make a right. However, thoughtful people should be troubled by much else, not just the travails of some politician or his party. Most particular­ly, they should be appalled that, instead of strengthen­ing democracy, Feb 8 was simply a power grab and a horse race followed by horse trade.

When candidates appeared on TV their language was crude, aggressive, and ad hominem. None spoke of plans for improving their community or country, and means of implementa­tion. Past experience shows that many who become parliament­arians seek only to exponentia­lly increase their wealth and power.

In the election run-up, the PML-N, PTI,

PPP and other rivals behaved as wolf packs, not political parties. Lacking defined agendas, they reluctantl­y trotted out half-baked election manifestos hurriedly slapped together just days earlier. Without details or implementa­tion schemes, these manifestos are worthless.

Personalit­y contests, sectarian and tribal affiliatio­ns, and bribes were all that mattered. No party offered insight into preventing the impending apocalypse of an imploding economy, exploding population, and resentment­s in Balochista­n and Gilgit-Baltistan. How is one to deal with desperate youth with university degrees but no skills? Seething religious fanaticism intertwine­d with misogyny? Disappeari­ng trust in key institutio­ns including the judiciary, bureaucrac­y, police and army?

Inadverten­tly Feb 8 transforme­d PTI’s jailed leader into Pakistan’s most popular politician. The iddat case: what a joke! Such clumsy persecutio­n tactics earned Khan widespread sympathy. In 2018, the establishm­ent worked hard to make him a hero; this time it did that by vilifying him.

The future: we have recently seen convicted felons and politician­s whitewashe­d and cleared. Given this precedent one knows Khan’s release will come within months or years. He will be declared innocent of crimes that he did not commit but also of those that he did. When he claws his way back to the top, a dark age will descend on Pakistan. Several signs point to this dismal outcome.

Let us recall the reign of Emperor Khan from August 2018 to April 2022. Surrounded by bootlicker­s, many of whom deserted him after May 9, 2023, Khan filled key positions with sycophants. This included appointing a nincompoop as Punjab’s chief minister, making a rank opportunis­t his closest confidante, choosing a crony general to head the ISI, and dismissing the HEC chairman on flimsy grounds.

While Khan ruled, religiousl­y inspired terrorists felt strongly emboldened. Accommodat­ing TTP fighters who had fled to Afghanista­n, he invited them back to resettle in North Waziristan. A decade earlier, directly after the 2013 suicide attack on the All Saints Church in Peshawar, he had requested TTP to open offices inside Pakistan for holding peace talks. A year later TTP massacred 141 children and teachers inside the Army Public School in Peshawar. Khan was booed by grieving parents as he tried to visit.

‘U-turn Khan’ earned his unflatteri­ng nickname after breaking approximat­ely 130 promises in less than four years. As just one example, weeks after publicly declaring Pakistan would never seek an IMF loan, Khan sent his financial managers to Washington to ask for one. When reminded he blustered that reneging on earlier promises is a “hallmark of great leadership”.

For those who follow a Pied Piper through narrow twisted streets this may not matter but people who value consistenc­y and truth were unconvince­d.

Khan’s tenure saw an attempt at further tightening of the draconian Peca law (now being used to suppress PTI itself), a decrease in Pakistan’s ranking on the World Press Freedom Index, and a worsening of Pakistan’s ranking on Transparen­cy Internatio­nal’s corruption perception index. As the Toshakhana and Al Qadir cases show, Mr Clean was no cleaner than the chor politician­s he viciously attacked for having pocketed public monies.

The negative impact of the SNC (Single National Curriculum) is possibly Khan’s greatest disservice to Pakistan.

For the first time public and private schools, all except those for the super-elite, were yoked to the madressah curriculum. The classless education he promised remains a mirage but education standards plummeted. The upcoming generation is being stuffed with religious materials but knows no skills.

In the minds of his blinded followers, as well as those who see the United States as the incarnatio­n of evil, Khan’s ouster was an

American conspiracy. At a public rally on March 2022, he waved a ‘secret’ document that supposedly was iron-clad proof of America calling for his eviction. But weeks later, he absolved America of blame while broadening the net of conspirato­rs to include ‘Super-King’ Bajwa (whose tenure had been extended), Nawaz Sharif, Asif Zardari, and Maulana Fazlur Rehman.

Referring to the PTI’s electoral victory Mani Shankar Aiyar, a well-known political commentato­r from India known for Pakistanfr­iendly views, excitedly declared: “February 8, 2024, will be chalked up as the historic day on which the people of Pakistan defeated their army.” Given that the establishm­ent indeed sought to vanquish Khan, is this really true?

At a superficia­l level, yes. Many PTI supporters did vote against the generals. Their antiarmy sentiment surfaced on May 9 when they attacked and burned military facilities.

On the other hand, Khan has never expressed dismay at the army’s business, commercial, and real-estate interests nor opposed appointmen­ts of retired army officers to top administra­tive positions.

He and the army are, to quote him, “on the same page”. His difference­s remain personal, some generals are for him, others against. Only animals, he famously declared, can be neutral.

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