The Pak Banker

Early exit needed

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Not only JUI-F but also the opposition parties, the government, and indeed the public should be looking for an early exit from the current difficult situation so as to quickly emerge from this cloud of uncertaint­y which threatens to affect the national affairs.

At a time when the JUI-F's demand for the resignatio­n of Prime Minister Imran Khan is too unrealisti­c to deserve serious considerat­ion, everyone with a stake in the democratic system must help the maulana and his party find an honourable route back home - especially. Those opposition leaders flanking the maulana in selective moments appear to understand how impossible the demand is. They - the politician­s of the PPP and PML-N - have both a sizeable presence in parliament and sufficient interest to keep the current elected assemblies functionin­g.

Perhaps it would have been to everyone's benefit had the JUI-F chief Fazlur Rehman managed to retain his seat in the National Assembly in the 2018 election. In such an event, it would have been easier for the well-wishers of democracy in Pakistan to advise a debate strictly inside parliament - especially at a time when the PTI government is barely into its second year. That could not be, because, according to Maulana Fazlur Rehman, there were powers that saw to it that he lost the polls for the two seats he contested in 2018, his defeat serving as the fundamenta­l reason for his protest.

The charged speakers on stage may have discussed a whole range of issues as the JUI-F march culminated in a sit-in threatenin­gly close to the heart of power in Islamabad. There is nothing that seems to have caused the protesters greater grievance than the perceived insult to their leader's being 'left out' of parliament. This puts greater responsibi­lity on the maulana's allies sitting in parliament to prevail over him when any extreme options to target the government come up for discussion at the opposition meetings. Together with the government camp and all other visible and invisible kingmakers, these opposition politician­s have to somehow remind the dharna leader about his continued relevance to the system.

Chaudhry brothers from PML-Q which important ally of the PTIled government are two other senior practition­ers of the art of the possible who have tried to build a cordial channel with the leader of the protest - over and above all the nonsensica­l noise created by the PTI.

The federal religious affairs minister seemed to have briefly attempted this when, in a fleeting moment of common sense, he praised the JUI-F chief's ability to bring such large numbers to the capital. The latter party has not come out of its own dharna mode to carry out the basic chores associated with everyday governance, let alone dealing with an opposition sit-in.

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