The family Mercedes -Photos by the writer On that July day, 18 years ago, Hussain Nawaz Sharif, the then 26-year-old First Son , proceeded to give a sermon to a few hundred sweaty news people who were packed like sardines. The 80-minute session felt like a sweatshop, with only two fans running to keep us cool. First, he put on a prayer cap to look pious then took it off. Lal sherbet saved the day as we were dropping off from dehydration when Hussain began with thetilawat from the Holy Quran. Setting the tone with his Islamic underpinnings, we now waited with bated breath to be enlightened on the secret of the Sharifs’ empire.
Despite minister Mushahid Hussain vetting the younger Sharif’s presentation and elocution skills, the speaker lost us as he droned on about the Sharif ‘medical city’ and ‘educational complex’. Meanwhile, Grandpa Sharif and Uncle Shahbaz merely sat with a group of clerics staring aimlessly around. Why didn’t Mian Mohammad Sharif address us? Perhaps we would have learnt something that soggy afternoon. Why didn’t he open up his heart and soul to share his dream of this mega project becoming a reality?
Raiwind could have been a celebration to the life and times of the head of the Sharif household. We could have been a part of the visionary’s life journey and witnessed the travails and tragedies he faced bravely to overcome political adversity. Instead all three Sharifs looked hunted. The Lahore press (most vibrant and bold) lashed out at them. Hussain appeared well prepared for the brickbats. Not once did he buckle under the unkind and cruel comments that came his way.
“You’re a kid, we want to hear the senior Sharif,” shouted one reporter from the back. Peals of laughter followed. Finally chacha Shahbaz took the floor. In his inimitable way, the Punjab chief minister tried bulldozing the tough questions asked of his nephew. Perhaps he couldn’t take the heat anymore as all the air-conditioning vents were soon directed towards where our hosts sat basking in the cool air unlike us ordinary ‘hacks’ shrouded in the stale hot air. The Sharifs’ thoughtlessness and utter contempt for the Fourth Estate was meanwhile taking a heavy toll on our patience. We wished to get away from the stifling hall and sermons on their philanthropy.
What was the urgency for the Sharifs to lug hundreds of press people to Raiwind? What did they want to reveal after Jamaat-i-Islami’s Qazi Hussain Ahmed had earlier spilled the beans on their corruption. At a time when the IMF was giving finance minister Sartaj Aziz sleepless nights and the finance ministry in turn taking foreign loans to be paid by future generations of Pakistanis, the First Family was blowing its own trumpet of philanthropic triumphs at Raiwind!
Imagine the amount of government funds blown up in per diems, hotel accommodation, travel and food that day. Top guns of the information ministry, Mushahid Hussain and Pervaiz Rashid, were present to ensure that the Sharifs got good press coverage. They ridiculed Qazi Hussain Ahmed’s facts and figures on Sharif ‘corruption’ that the duo claimed to be false. Instead, we were shown around the Sharifs’ living quarters, displaying how simply they lived, ate and prayed in the 5,400sq feet of residential area. Hussain allowed us to roam around in their kitchen and bedrooms. The fact that they opened up their homes to the press while their womenfolk were moved upstairs spoke of their humility and simplicity, we were reminded repeatedly by our handlers. But what about their “golden buggies” that one had heard of?
The fact is that Rs800 million were used up from taxpayers’ money to spruce up Raiwind Palace for Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif to stay when he visited Lahore every weekend in his second term. Was that fair?
Published in Dawn, Sunday Magazine, April 24th, 2016