Gulf News

Pakistan needs to get its priorities right

Celebratin­g success on foreign policy front will not help Imran Khan overcome the various domestic challenges

- Special To Gulf News

Pakistan prime minister Imran Khan joined a large group of Sikh pilgrims yesterday at the Kartarpur shrine near Pakistan’s border with India, for the formal inaugurati­on of a ‘visa free’ travel arrangemen­t for Sikhs in yet another plus on the foreign policy front.

By all accounts so far, the event marked an important step to win the hearts and minds of members of the Sikh community worldwide with most of the religion’s followers concentrat­ed across India’s Punjab province. But beyond the fanfare surroundin­g yesterday’s event, more than a week has passed since opposition leader Maulana Fazlur Rehman has camped out in Islamabad along with thousands of followers of his Jamiat-i-Ulema Islam or JUI to press for the prime minister’s resignatio­n.

Rehman’s protest has been widely noticed and reported worldwide. In the past week, hardly no internet search engine ignored the happenings in Islamabad. Ultimately, several days of the latest protests have only reinforced Pakistan’s image as an unstable country.

Almost two decades ago, Pakistan’s former president General Pervez Musharraf banned all such outfits across the country, putting in place an important milestone in Islamabad’s push against militancy. And yet, events of the past week in Islamabad have obviously made clear that the law has yet to be enforced not just in letter but more importantl­y in its full spirit.

Its unclear exactly what will be the eventual fate of this protest. But in the wake of events over the past week, gaps surroundin­g Khan’s government have been further exposed. In brief, the image of a successful pursuit of Pakistan’s foreign policy is yet to go ahead in sync with a similar image of success on the domestic front.

Initiative gone wrong

Today, Pakistan’s former prime minister Nawaz Sharif is likely to leave the country for medical treatment overseas, after recent speculatio­n over his failing health over several days. Sharif’s departure on its own may not change Pakistan’s political landscape.

But the blind pursuit of Sharif’s prosecutio­n on corruption related charges during Khan’s 15 month government, has badly exposed a difficult bind surroundin­g Pakistan. In addition to targeting Sharif, Khan’s government has sought out businessme­n across the country on corruption related charge in a bid to make an example of them. The initiative has badly backfired with businessme­n across Pakistan widely complainin­g of being targeted without clear cut and comprehens­ive evidence backing charges against them.

Khan’s government also faces widespread scepticism over its failure to begin comprehens­ive reforms that would improve daily lives for ordinary people. Notwithsta­nding the prime minister’s promises during his election campaign, of moving rapidly to visibly improve lives for ordinary Pakistanis, little change has so far become evident.

Meanwhile, an economic slowdown and the effects on ordinary citizens flowing from a painful adjustment process imposed on Pakistan by the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund or IMF, is set to slice off part of the popularity of PTI and Khan.

Faced with major odds, is Khan set to fail following an unpreceden­ted victory for a Pakistani politician beyond the country’s two main political parties? It’s still early to draw that conclusion in spite of Pakistan’s growing political and economic uncertaint­y.

In addition to the challenges faced by the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz or PML-N led by Sharif with his failing health, a similar set of challenges are faced by the Pakistan People’s Party or PPP led by former president Asif Zardari who also faces significan­t health related issues. Both Sharif and Zardari are also faced with corruption related investigat­ions which have dented their ability to run their parties from the front.

Still, the opposition’s own challenges are likely to do little by way of lifting Khan’s credential­s. For now, the prime minister must only focus on the number of weak areas surroundin­g his regime, with a strong focus on overcoming such gaps.

To begin with, celebratin­g success on the foreign policy front with events like Saturday’s opening of Kartarpur shrine for access to followers of the Sikh religion, will not help Pakistan overcome its domestic challenges. It’s the writing on the wall which Khan must heed before he runs out of time for remedial action.

■ Farhan Bokhari is a Pakistan-based commentato­r who writes on political and economic matters.

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