New mayor of Karachi vows to serve people from prison
KARACHI: Imprisoned Waseem Akhtar of the Muttahida Qaumi Movement was on Tuesday sworn in as the new mayor of Karachi — about nine months after holding of the local government elections.
Besides Karachi’s district municipal corporations, more than 200 heads of as many large municipal bodies in Sindh also took the oath of their office on Tuesday, thus, formally completing a prolonged process of the LG elections that began there even before elections in Karachi.
Mr Akhtar, who won the mayoral election with an overwhelming majority last week, took the oath of the city’s highest office in a ceremony held at Gulshan-i-Jinnah (Polo Ground) amid loud celebratory slogans by his party workers as well as rival Pakistan Peoples Party cadres.
MQM’s Waseem Akhtar is first person in the country to win mayoral election from jail
Mr Akhtar is the first person in the country’s history to have won the mayoral election from prison. He has been in prison since July 19 after an antiterrorism court dismissed his pre-arrest interim bail application in a case pertaining to treatment of suspected terrorists.
Karachi’s Deputy Mayor Arshad Vohra also took the oath of his office. Returning Officer Samiuddin Siddiqui administered the oath to the pair.
The tenure of the city’s last elected mayor, then called nazim, Syed Mustafa Kamal, ended almost six and a half years ago in February 2010.
Mr Akhtar was brought in for the swearing-in ceremony from the Karachi central prison in an armoured personnel carrier.
Members of Karachi mayor’s family, senior leadership of the MQM, including its head Dr Farooq Sattar, were present at the Polo Ground to attend the ceremony.
“I will request the Sindh chief minister to either give me an office at the central jail or pass a law so that I can solve people’s issues,” he said while speaking to the gathering after taking the oath.
He called upon diplomats and business community to support him in this endeavour. “I need your help to fix the issues [faced by Karachi],” he said.
As his party had announced that it had no ties with its self-exiled founder Altaf Hussain, Mr Akhtar gave no mention of him in his speech and subsequent media talk.
It seemed that he kept his former aggressive self in check and kept a reconciliatory tone as he thanked everyone including the people of Karachi, workers belonging to the MQM, PPP, Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz, Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf, Jamaat-i-Islami and all those who participated in the election.
“I thank you all for electing me and putting confidence in me. I thank the Supreme Court as well which ordered [holding of] the local government elections and the process at last completed after several months,” he said.
Speaking about the delay in the mayoral election, he said: “It took nine months after election here for a mayor to be sworn in while the mayor in London assumed his office just four hours after he was declared elected.”
“On a lighter side,” he quipped, “it is almost as if this was a Caesarean child. It was not a normal delivery. Let’s hope for the best.”