This was when the Ayub regime was facing a protest movement. Asghar’s popularity graph quickly shot up. In his book Pakistan People’s Party: Rise to Power, Philip E. Jones writes that at one point Asghar Khan’s gatherings were drawing more people than even Bhutto’s rallies — so much so that in 1969 when Bhutto invited Asghar to join the PPP, the latter responded by saying, “It is you who should join me.”
Asghar Khan and Bhutto led the charge against Ayub in West Pakistan. Both were not only popular among the youth, but they were also being hailed by young military officers.
But Asghar Khan formed his party just months before the 1970 election. And in another blunder, the party’s name could not appear on the ballot papers. People did not know who the party’s candidates were. What’s more, a young PPP candidate defeated Asghar Khan in a National Assembly constituency of Rawalpindi.
By 1975 Asghar Khan was able to revive his political standing and his party was joined by future political starlets such as Nawaz Sharif, Aitzaz Ahsan, Sheikh Rashid Ahmad, Mushahid Hussain, Akbar Bugti and former PPP men such as Hanif Ramay and Ahmad Raza Kasuri. A month before the 1977 election, TI agreed to join the PNA, an anti-PPP electoral alliance which also included the country’s three leading religious parties. In a fiery campaign speech in Attock, Asghar told a large audience that he would not only defeat Bhutto but also hang him in public on the Attock Bridge!
Just when it seemed Asghar’s burst of fame was over, he put his party in the forefront against the Z.A. Bhutto regime (1971-77). The party — the Tehreek-i-Istaqlal (TI) — described itself as a “modern democratic” one. It opposed Bhutto’s economic policies and “dictatorial attitude.”
By 1975, Asghar Khan was able to revive his political standing and his party was joined by future political starlets such as Nawaz Sharif, Aitzaz Ahsan, Sheikh Rashid Ahmad, Mushahid Hussain, Akbar Bugti and former PPP men such as Hanif Ramay and Ahmad Raza Kasuri.
A month before the 1977 election, TI agreed to join the Pakistan National Alliance (PNA), an anti-PPP electoral alliance which also included the country’s three leading religious parties. In a fiery campaign speech in Attock, Asghar Khan told a large audience that he would not only defeat Bhutto but also hang him in public on the Attock Bridge!
Asghar Khan managed to win an NA seat (this time from Karachi), but the PNA came a distant second in the 1977 election. Asghar Khan accused Bhutto of rigging the vote and the PNA launched a concentrated protest movement which turned violent. Bhutto opened talks with the alliance but Asghar Khan refused to meet him. So the heads of three religious parties led the talks for PNA.
In one of his last major interviews, veteran member of the Jamaat-i-Islami (JI) the late Professor Ghafoor told Geo TV that just when the talks were heading for an amicable solution, Zia imposed Martial Law. Professor Ghafoor added that it was the PNA’s two “secular leaders”, Begum Naseem Wali and Asghar Khan, who tried to “sabotage the talks” and “hailed the military take-over.” It was ironic because Zia’s was a reactionary coup.
In his 2005 autobiography, Asghar Khan refuted this claim by suggesting that it was the JI which joined Zia’s first cabinet. He wrote that TI would have swept the promised 1979 election, but Zia never held the vote. Some believe that Asghar Khan was used by the anti-Bhutto civilian and establishmentarian segments and then discarded.
Asghar Khan’s graph plummeted again, so much so that he had to reconcile with Bhutto’s daughter Benazir. During the 1990 election he allied TI with the PPP, but lost the election against Nawaz Sharif in Lahore’s NA-95 constituency.
So from 1990 onward, the man twice put on the brink of political glory by the combination of discreet establishmentarian nods and wild populist support, quietly faded into political oblivion.
In 2012, the now tiny TI merged with Imran Khan’s PTI.
Published in Dawn, EOS, August 13th, 2017