Mehmood Khan Achakzai
The Pashtun leader
by Ali Arqam
Mehmood Khan Achakzai’s support base is concentrated in the Pashtun districts of Balochistan and scattered across the Pashtun region in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, including the recently merged Fata.
PkMAP enthusiasts revere Achakzai, refer to him as mashar (Pashto for ‘elder’ or ‘leader’), and the party revolves around his personality.
The enthusiasts — who are referred to as muridaan, a word used for the devotees of a sufi clan — follow and defend every word and action of his, his kin and others close to him.
This reverence has its flip side: if anyone ever ends up in the bad books of the mashar, as has happened with few of the party’s second tier leaders, they are accused of betrayal.
This has caused a rift in the party, which was further intensified when Achakzai’s elder brother, Muhammad Khan, was cherry-picked for the office of governor of Balochistan, and his younger brother, Hamid Khan, was given the provincial portfolio of planning and development.
On the electoral front, PkMAP’s popular support predicated on the demands of Pashtun rights in Balochistan — such as, a share for Pashtuns in resources and jobs on par with the Baloch, sometimes going as far as engaging in the rhetoric of demanding a separate Pashtun province carved out of Pashtun-heavy regions of Balochistan.
While Achakzai’s charisma may get his party a handful of constituencies, PkMAP will face strong opposition from JUI-F, powerful electables, the Pashtun tribal elite, as well as their decades-old foe, the ANP.