CHAKWAL, Feb 12: After over a decade of inactivity in Chakwal, Pakistan Tehrik-i-Insaaf (PTI) is making another attempt at becoming a force to challenge the dominant Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N).

A visit by party chairman Imran Khan on Sunday, during which he met party leaders and addressed public gatherings, has energised PTI supporters and sparked new ambitions.

Khan's first stop in Chakwal was a gathering organised by Chaudhry Ali Nasir Bhatti, a former union council nazim, who left the PML-N for the PTI two years ago.

In attempting to prove that he deserved the right to contest for the PP 20 seat in the Provincial Assembly, Bhatti arranged a large meeting and then served lunch to over 5,000 participants, at an estimated cost of Rs40,000. In the evening, Khan met with Pir Shaukat Hussain, who hopes to contest the NA 60 seat in the National Assembly.

Khan's visit to Chakwal coincided with the entrance into the PTI of several new members.

One of these is Raja Yassir Sarfaraz, who runs an elite school in Chakwal, where he had organised another crowd for Imran Khan to address.

Although his cousin and uncle are senior leaders of the PPP, Raja Yassir decided instead to make his first foray in politics with the PTI.

In Choa Saidan Shah, former MPA Maha Tareen Raja had arranged yet another crowd for Imran Khan. Mrs Raja joined PTI with her father, Raja Munawar, a politician who began his career in 1971 with the PPP, later served as an adviser to General Ziaul Haq, joined the Islami Jamhoori Itehad and became a member of PML-N and PML-Q before settling into the PTI. “We are very optimistic about the PTI's position in Chakwal,” Maha Tareen Raja said. “It's more popular each day.”

Maha Tareen Raja's husband, Dr. Naeem Tareen, is a relative of PTI stalwart Jahangir Khan Tareen, and sources report it was through this connection that Maha Tareen and her father joined the party. While in Choa Saidan Shah, Imran Khan also visited Malik Zeeshan, PTI's tehsil organiser. In the evening, he visited poet Tabish Kamal, who was later spotted at a photo studio, where he was developing photos of himself with Imran Khan.

Although Imran Khan's visit has sparked new hopes, the PTI has had a difficult history in Chakwal, marked by numerous defections. In 2012, Sardar Ghulam Abbas, one of the area's most influential politicians, left the party fold after less than two years as a member.

Raja Sanaul Haq, who joined the PTI in 2011, jumped ship for the PPP soon after, when his younger brother's father-in-law, Raja Pervez Ashraf, became Prime Minister.

The PTI is also still attempting to mitigate the damage caused by Sardar Faiz Tamman, who served for seven years as an MNA from NA 61.

It was eventually revealed that Tamman had faked his educational credentials, and it remains to be seen whether voters will forgive that deception.

Opinion

Editorial

PTI in disarray
Updated 30 Nov, 2024

PTI in disarray

PTI’s protest plans came abruptly undone because key decisions were swayed by personal ambitions rather than political wisdom and restraint.
Tired tactics
30 Nov, 2024

Tired tactics

Matiullah's arrest appears to be a case of the state’s overzealous and misplaced application of the law.
Smog struggle
30 Nov, 2024

Smog struggle

AS smog continues to shroud parts of Pakistan, an Ipsos survey highlights the scope of this environmental hazard....
Solidarity with Palestine
Updated 29 Nov, 2024

Solidarity with Palestine

The wretched of the earth see in the Palestinian struggle against Israel a mirror of themselves.
Little relief for public
29 Nov, 2024

Little relief for public

INFLATION, the rate of increase in the prices of goods and services over a given period of time, has receded...
Right to education
29 Nov, 2024

Right to education

IT is troubling to learn that over 16,500 students of the University of Karachi (KU) have defaulted on fee payments...