As the military-led Karachi Operation gradually chipped away at the MQM’s militant arm, the party lost much of its teeth. There were few mobilisers on the ground as the party reeled from a crisis of leadership. Post August 22, the MQM-P lost many of its offices too as the Rangers razed any structure deemed to be constructed on grabbed land.
Such was the blow dealt to the MQM-P by these measures that even old foes, the Afaq Ahmed-led Mohajir Qaumi Movement (commonly known as Haqiqi), staged a rally to celebrate the party’s dissociation with Altaf Hussain. Haqiqi expected that it would now be easier for them to fill the vacuum created.
Meanwhile the PSP seemed to be popping up in areas with offices and structures that were previously MQM strongholds. A striking tactic of their intrusion was the hoisting of Pakistan flags in areas they felt had been annexed. In other words, it was the triumph of Pakistani nationalism over Mohajir nationalism in localities that were deemed to be strongholds of the MQM.
But while the MQM-P engaged in the politics of respectability, the PSP was filling a vacuum of political patronage. PSP secretary general Anis Qaimkhani kept in touch with young activists behind bars, some with heinous charges, providing emotional as well as logistical
support to them. Qaimkhani was promising to have all charges dropped against them if they entered the PSP. Indeed, the first entrants into the PSP were activists released from jail who had found a way out with a clean chit against the crimes they had committed.
Put another way, these young men weren’t technically coerced into joining the PSP but many joined of their will.
But another factor became crucial in the migration of MQM activists into the PSP. When the first round of arrests took place under the Karachi Operation, some of those returning from incarceration returned with tales of gruesome torture. This warned the others of the consequences that awaited if they didn’t relent to the Rangers’ demand of quitting the MQM and joining the PSP instead.
And while many activists might not have relented, they faced great pressure from their families to spare them the ignominy and anxiety of their loved one going missing or put through torture. If their son or husband wasn’t quitting the MQM himself, families stepped forward to have their loved ones sign the PSP entry form. Before they were released, many old MQM activists were forced to sign affidavits stating that not only would they not return to the MQM, but that they would also work in the PSP with the same vigour and dedication they displayed for the MQM.
Initially many of those who returned harboured ambitions of biding their time before switching loyalties again. But from the upper echelons of the PSP came the narrative of the MQM (and even the MQM-P) taking them for a ride. Many of those who returned from lock-ups now feel deserted by their old party. Most felt that they had committed crimes in the name of identity politics, but nobody from the old party came to their rescue when things got tough.
But MQM-P officials remain hopeful that the army of activists that are now under the umbrella of the PSP will switch loyalties “when the time comes.” As one senior leader put it, the MQM-P’s current focus is on constituents and not activists — according to one leader, “90 percent of PSP activists are in touch with us.”
A newer factor that has come to play on the ground is the General (retd) Pervez Musharraf-led All Pakistan Muslim League (APML). Much like the PSP, the APML too is feeding on old MQM cadres, providing similar guarantees that Qaimkhani had been providing. In fact, on the night of November 8 when Sattar and Kamal conducted a joint press conference at the Karachi Press Club, it was a delegation of APML activists that arrived with a box of mithai to celebrate what was being viewed as a merger of the two parties. A few days later, Musharraf issued a statement that an alliance between the MQM-P, PSP and the APML can defeat the PPP.
Meanwhile party leaders of the MQM-P, including Sattar, reject the possibility of the MQM going anywhere or compromising on the Mohajir identity. They maintain that, as a matter of principle, a smaller body should merge into a larger one, if at all a merger is being deliberated.
SATTAR’S NEW DIRECTIONS
In recent times, the leadership of the MQM-P has been emphasising that the “real problems” in the MQM took place between 2008 and 2013, an era when the MQM was operationally controlled by Anis Qaimkhani. This line is oft-repeated in the MQM-P since it has become the defining narrative of the MQM-P.
The real problems alluded to by many include the harbouring of target killers, sectarian hit men, land grabbing, extortions, arson and street crime in its ranks. The carnage on May 12, 2007; the lesser-known arson in North Karachi which claimed the lives of 40 people, including 22 children; and the 2012 Baldia factory fire are all swords of Damocles hanging over those associated with the united MQM of Altaf Hussain.
And it has assumed greater significance ever since the announcement of the “arrest” of Hammad Siddiqui, former chief of the MQM’s Karachi Tanzeemi Committee. Sooner or later, both PSP and MQM-P leaders claim, Siddiqui will be announced as PSP’s latest star.
Without a doubt, Siddiqui provides an organisational presence and assertiveness that is hard to find otherwise. But crucially, his presence in the PSP means that Mustafa Kamal has been able to collect all mid-tier leaders with the experience of running a political organisation in Karachi. And while they were mid-tier leaders in the old MQM, they are all critical actors in the PSP.
Consider the case of Raza Haroon. Part of the “cultured” representatives of the old MQM, Haroon was badly beaten up at old party headquarters Nine-Zero over alleged disloyalty to Altaf Hussain. As a measure of repenting and re-proving his loyalty to Hussain, he was reassigned to the MQM’s literary wing. Haroon then took charge of translating Hussain’s book Falsafa-i-Mohabbat [Philosophy of Love]. While Hussain had relegated Haroon to a position of irrelevance, today Haroon is the secretary-general of the PSP.
Sattar’s MQM-P has seen the elevation of old mid-tier leaders into the Rabita Committee as well as the rise of a new mid-tier leadership. The latter in fact includes young women, being groomed to assume greater roles of responsibility in the party.
The one exception to this rule is Kamran Tessori, one of the incumbent deputy convenors of the party. The other two deputy convenors, Waseem Akhtar and Shahid Pasha, have risen organically and through the ranks to assume the positions that they do today. But Tessori, a jewels trader, was inducted into the party after the MQM-P struggled with financiers for everyday operations. His elevation is in part an acknowledgment of bankrolling the party in its tumultuous times.
Sattar’s greatest achievement till now had been to ensure that any disenchantment with his decisions are democratically and politely resolved. Tessori and Akhtar had run into a tiff after the former accused the latter of embezzling funds. The incumbent mayor was then elevated to the position of deputy convenor so as to pacify his concern that an outsider was suddenly enjoying great say in organisational affairs.
HERE TO STAY
The received wisdom is that while the establishment meddles in the affairs of political parties, it does so only where certain fissures already exist. To say that one or the other of MQM-P and PSP is a creation of the establishment is a folly. Leaders of both parties had legitimate grievances against the old leadership and the ad-hocism that was at play in running the party.
But while the PSP arrived with the overt and covert backing of the establishment, change in the MQM-P arrived internally and as a matter of opportunity. And it was this change that found great support in the echelons of power in Sindh and Islamabad. What Sattar has been unable to sort out is how to deflect the pressure of the establishment, which continues to hold the MQM-P ransom for crimes committed in another age and political context. Farooq Sattar and Aamir Khan both have cases of treason filed against them. The cases are being heard in an anti-terrorism court in Karachi. The apprehension from within the party is that these cases can be used to turn the tables on Sattar whenever the need for that arises.
But when it comes to politics proper, one of the great differentiators between Farooq Sattar and Mustafa Kamal is their attitude towards the founder of the MQM. While Kamal abused away, Sattar acknowledged Altaf Hussain not only as the founder but also the man responsible for getting Mohajirs political representation and power. In the eyes of the Altaf Hussain supporter, Sattar earned some brownie points but not more. Meanwhile, the founder of the MQM has been releasing audio and video messages on social media, largely denouncing both Sattar and Kamal as traitors.
Irrespective of the line being issued in London, Sattar enjoys the advantage of the tehreeki arm of the united MQM being in disarray because it has no leaders on the ground. Altaf Hussain has been enjoying a great audience on social media but the reach of social media is dwarfed by mainstream media. As a result, his message is only being communicated to diehard activists and supporters with access to social media. Meanwhile the media bar on anything to do with Hussain means that Sattar has been able to project his vision on to the party, slow and tedious a process as that might be. Whether this translates into votes is another matter altogether.
On the night of November 16, Sattar emerged as the third power player in Mohajir politics. And although internal issues and external pressures do exist, the road to the MQM finding its teeth again has become clearer.
The writer is a member of staff.
He tweets @ASYusuf
Published in Dawn, EOS, November 19th, 2017