PAK Sarzameen Party leader Mustafa Kamal hugs Muttahida Qaumi Movement-Pakistan chief Dr Farooq Sattar during the joint news conference at the Karachi Press Club on Wednesday.—INP
KARACHI: Following nightlong ‘negotiations’ at a Defence area safe house, the central leadership of the Muttahida Qaumi Movement-Pakistan (MQM-P) and Pak Sarzameen Party (PSP) on Wednesday evening announced forging a ‘political alliance’ to contest the upcoming elections from the platform of a single party and on one symbol.
The announcement was made by MQM-P head Dr Farooq Sattar and PSP chairman Mustafa Kamal at a joint news conference at the Karachi Press Club. However, both remained silent as to who would lead the alliance that Dr Sattar said was aimed at “saving the vote bank from division”.
The gist of the presser suggested that the two parties would continue to exist as separate entities till they finalise all modalities through talks, including the name of the alliance, one election symbol and their manifesto.
Announce contesting next elections from platform of single party, on one symbol; Gen Musharraf congratulates ‘Mohajir community’
Interestingly, former president retired Gen Pervez Musharraf — whose All Pakistan Muslim League’s leaders time and again expressed their desire that the former dictator lead a unified MQM — congratulated the Mohajir community on the alliance of the two parties.
“Today I am very happy that the unity of Mohair community is returning...meaning MQM and PSP are [going to be] united,” he said in a video statement released even before the MQM-PSP press conference.
The move came amid reports that certain lawmakers of the MQM-P were ready to join the Pakistan Peoples Party. Former president Asif Ali Zardari met MQM Senator Khushbakht Shujaat and MNAs Ali Rashid, Salman Mujahid Baloch and Dr Fauzia Hameed over the past couple of days and it was widely believed that the PPP was luring them into its fold.
Sources told Dawn that following Mr Kamal’s Tuesday night tirade in which he strongly criticised state institutions for “dry-cleaning” Dr Sattar on Aug 22 last year and vowed to “bury the MQM”, the central leadership of the two parties had been summoned by the powers that be for a late-night meeting at a Defence safe house.
Without mincing words, the sources said, both Mr Kamal and Dr Sattar were communicated that the powers that be could no longer tolerate their infighting and they should take practical steps leading to their amalgamation no matter how serious their differences were.
The sources said that the Tuesday night meeting was different from the ones held previously in which the establishment played the role of a mediator and urged the two parties to sort out their differences.
As the meeting ended late in the night, both parties held their separate meetings on Wednesday to take their respective cadres into confidence about the move. Many lawmakers and members of the MQM-P coordination committee openly expressed their unhappiness over what they called a unilateral decision taken by Dr Sattar and his little coterie of friends.
Dr Sattar’s second-in-command Amir Khan, who holds the position of senior deputy convener and is currently abroad, was informed about the developments by party leaders over the phone.
However, he expressed resentment over the decision while talking to private news channels. He said that whatever yielded from the meetings between the two parties was not the outcome of the “mandate given to Dr Farooq Sattar by the party”.