Multan Road, the highway that leads from Lahore to Multan, is lined with many villages along both sides of the road. Every now and then, wall-chalking emerges in one village or the other in praise of the proscribed Jamaat-ud-Dawa (JuD). And with the formation of the Milli Muslim League (MML), chalkings now venerate party chief Saif Khalid and ideologue Hafiz Saeed. Registered or not, the MML has introduced a new culture to electoral politics: the gun-toting ‘mujahid’ Hafiz Saeed is the new face on mainstream political posters.
Formed on August 7 this year, the MML jumped into the by-elections for NA-120 after former prime minister Nawaz Sharif was de-seated by the Supreme Court. It had thrown its support behind an independent candidate since the registration of the MML as a political party with the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) was being awaited at that time.
Although voters’ response in the NA-120 by-polls was not of outright rejection but it was not too encouraging either.
Unity and loyalty are already being stretched as (former) militants mull whether entering mainstream politics is ‘Islamic’ or not
“We bagged fourth position with hardly four weeks of campaigning but we were succeeded in conveying our message to hundreds of thousands of voters, which is a big achievement,” argues MML Information Secretary Tabish Qayyum.
Undeterred by the first setback, the party decided to contest another by-election, in NA-4 (Peshawar) this time round, where the MML supported independent candidate Liaquat Ali.
“The results of the NA-120 by-elections were very encouraging for us,” says Qayyum. “We are confident that the candidate who is being backed by the party in NA-4 will get more votes as compared to the candidate in NA-120.”
And yet, even in its short lifespan, the challenges for the MML on the road to becoming a mainstream political party are many. Not only is the party being squeezed by democratic actors — the MML’s registration being turned down by the ECP at the behest of the interior ministry, for example — but there is also a heavily contested debate on whether politics is ‘Islamic’ or not. More than the pressure from the outside, it is the internal debate that needs some resolution for the MML to forge ahead.
DIVIDED MILLAT
“Unity in the ranks of the JuD is fast eroding after the leadership decided to enter politics,” says one Multan-based JuD activist, who spoke on condition of anonymity. He distanced himself from the organisational activities being carried out by the MML. “Democratic politics was ‘kufr’ in the past; how has it suddenly become Islamic?”
The JuD activist traced the outfit’s abhorrence with politics back to 1987, when Markaz-ud-Dawa-wal-Irshad was founded by Hafiz Saeed. Back then, not only were democratic politics deemed un-Islamic but so were things such as video cameras, films, snapping photographs of living things, television sets and so on. In fact campaigns were conducted in almost all cities of the country to publicly destroy cameras and television sets.