Post Reply 
 
Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
The Gilgit-Baltistan election: who stands where! Entry of MQM
11-09-2009, 05:40 AM
Post: #1
The Gilgit-Baltistan election: who stands where! Entry of MQM
Monday, November 09, 2009
By M Ismail Khan

Gilgit-Baltistan’s first election after attaining the province-like status is set to produce a hung assembly. Major mainstream political parties are likely to get a small part of the pie while a handful of seats would go to independent candidates.

The 12 November election is generating intense campaigns. The PML-N, the PML-Q, the MQM, the PPP, the ANP, the PTI, the JI, the JUI and the Gilgit-Baltistan Democratic Alliance (GBDA) — a local nationalist party — are all fielding candidates for the 24 members to be directly elected to the Gilgit-Baltistan Legislative Assembly (GBLA). Election on nine reserved seats, six for women and three for technocrats, will be held later.

Being a federally administered territory for the last 62 years, traditionally Gilgit-Baltistan’s voters tend to swing towards the incumbent government in Islamabad. This will also be the first election in the region following the assassination of former PM Benazir Bhutto, who was the architect of the 1994 Legal Framework Order (LFO) introducing a degree of electoral reforms in the region, which was later overhauled by Nawaz Sharif and then Shaukat Aziz governments before the current PPP administration issued a new LFO in September 2009 titled “Gilgit-Baltistan Empowerment and Self-Governance Order”. Therefore, the PPP enjoys a clear advantage, ideally for a landslide victory. But that is surprisingly an unlikely scenario in this election.

The PPP will manage to muster a couple of seats more than the PML-N, the PML-Q and the MQM but there is no chance of any single party making it big enough to form a government on its own. In fact, by the morning of 13 November, PPP could face a similar situation as it has in the Centre, meaning a simple majority of about 7 to 8 seats in the 24-member assembly and having to enter into a tedious coalition building process. The PPP could have fared better, had it gone for younger and more capable candidates while awarding tickets, but instead the party went for loyalists who unfortunately suffer from credibility as well as capacity issues at the local level. Therefore, much of its leading luminaries are either losing the election or are facing extremely close contests. The party needs serious reforms in the leadership cadre to do justice to its potential in Gilgit-Baltistan.

The PML-N went through a rough patch in Gilgit-Baltistan following Musharraf’s takeover. Most of their leading figures were either tempted to switch over to the PML-Q or faced political obscurity. But Nawaz Sharif’s return has changed the situation and the party loyalists have regrouped and are working hard to strengthen the party. Unlike the PPP where local office holders blocked tickets of near consensus and winning candidates, the PML-N office-bearers sacrificed their personal interests to accommodate potential candidates for the party’s well being. The latest whirlwind campaign tour by Nawaz Sharif and Shahbaz Sharif to Gilgit-Baltistan has boosted the party’s confidence and chances.

The PML-N’s high powered political engagement in the border district of Skardu and Ganche is also likely to go down well in the military circles, as among all the political and other stakeholders in the country, it is probably the military establishment which has developed the deepest understanding of the people and geo-strategic importance of Gilgit-Baltistan. The Northern Areas (Gilgit-Baltistan) Light Infantry (NLI) Regiment’s outstanding skills in mountain warfare on Siachen and Kargil sectors, and its major contribution to fighting the insurgency in Swat and Malakand and now in South Waziristan has further elevated Gilgit-Baltistan’s position.

The PML-Q is down but certainly not out of the race. Senator Nisar Memon and MNA Marvi Memon demonstrated strong personal commitment to keep the party afloat in the area. The father and daughter duo has managed to retain interest of some winning horses. Mushahid Hussain has joined the campaign. His communication skills can come handy for the PML-Q candidates precariously standing on the edges. In case the PML-Q manages to pull a couple of seats from Gilgit and at least one from Baltistan, the party will be in line to claim a stake in a coalition government along with other contenders.

But the biggest surprise package of the 2009 GBLA election is the grand entry of the MQM. Out of nowhere, the MQM has become a major political force in Gilgit-Baltistan. The MQM is showing the hallmark of a party hungry for success outside its traditional hub of Karachi and Hyderabad. The MQM’s entry, first in the AJK legislature through two reserved seats for migrant Kashmiris and now in Gilgit-Baltistan, which is more of a mainstream arena as for the election is concerned, could be a sign of the party’s budding ambitions. Locally, the MQM gains are welcomed as a good antidote to the zero sum sectarian politics. The party has fielded 19 candidates compared to the PPP’s 23, the PML-N’s 15 and the PML-Q’s 14. Regardless of the number of seats the MQM would garner, which by the way is 2 to 4 seats at best and none at worst, the party is poised to become a major political actor in the long run.

The ANP, which is stranded in a war-like situation on the home turf, has also joined the foray in what the NWFP considers its backyard. Their effort is a bit too feeble and timing bit too late though. The same goes with Imran Khan’s PTI. Both have fielded candidates in Gilgit region. The JUI enjoys a foothold in the Diamer district which borders the NWFP but again in view of a closely contested election among the mainstream parties, the JUI’s and other far right parties’ prospects are limited.

With a relatively small population and vast area thrice bigger than the size of Fata and 12 times larger than the AJK, Gilgit-Baltistan is Pakistan’s hidden Canada in terms of relative peace, richness of natural resources and investment opportunities, particularly in the direly needed hydro power sector. Known for its geo-strategic location and links with major economic zones in West, Central and South Asia, Gilgit-Baltistan’s massive prospects in cross border trade, horticulture, energy, mineral, tourism and water sectors. But it’s a potential that can only be harnessed if the region is suitably mainstreamed through a legitimate constitutional framework ensuring constitutionally protected institutions and an independent judiciary — things that are still missing in the latest ‘Empowerment Order”.

Here, the MQM’s messages are striking the chord. They are talking about the constitutional rights of the people, the neglect, the denials, the right of representation in parliament, right to access Pakistan’s Supreme Court, Gilgit-Baltistan’s right to become Pakistan’s fifth province, seeking truth and equality — elements that are beyond the standard promises of development funds and politics of packages — hence it is evident that in the future the party which gets clear message across reflecting true feelings of the majority of constituents will eventually command majority in electoral politics of Gilgit-Baltistan as well. Hard sell, but that’s how politics works or does not work.

(The writer has spoken on the rights of Gilgit-Baltistan and Kashmir in a number of national and international forums including the European Parliament, the United Nations and the US Congress. Email: ismail.mik@gmail.com)

http://www.thenews.com.pk/daily_detail.asp?id=207492
Find all posts by this user
Quote this message in a reply
Post Reply 


Possibly Related Threads...
Thread: Author Replies: Views: Last Post
  Housing scheme clarifies report; The News stands by its story Salman 0 6,329 10-30-2013 01:29 PM
Last Post: Salman
  UAE investment and trade with Pakistan stands out Salman 0 4,218 02-13-2012 11:53 AM
Last Post: Salman
  China stands by Pakistan Lahore_Real_Estate 0 3,812 09-27-2011 04:41 PM
Last Post: Lahore_Real_Estate
  Ban Fazl’s entry in UK: Burney Lahore_Real_Estate 0 3,256 11-26-2010 01:31 PM
Last Post: Lahore_Real_Estate
  Pakistan’s housing shortage stands at 7.57m units: WB Lahore_Real_Estate 0 4,069 10-11-2010 12:05 PM
Last Post: Lahore_Real_Estate
  SC bans entry of police in polling station Lahore_Real_Estate 0 3,457 08-05-2010 01:14 PM
Last Post: Lahore_Real_Estate
  Lahore Zimni Election, Siasi Jamaten aur Khokhar (Attal-ul-Haq Qasmi) LRE 0 3,968 06-27-2010 11:54 PM
Last Post: LRE
  Mid-Term Election, Zardari & Some News! LRE 0 3,546 06-15-2010 11:30 PM
Last Post: LRE
  Hunza-Gilgit section of Karakoram Highway to open today Lahore_Real_Estate 0 3,366 05-31-2010 02:58 PM
Last Post: Lahore_Real_Estate
  New plan for Capital: Security zone extended up to entry points Lahore_Real_Estate 0 3,630 04-08-2010 11:02 AM
Last Post: Lahore_Real_Estate
  10 Years Tax-Holiday for Gilgit-Baltistan Investors Likely LRE 0 3,993 04-01-2010 06:40 PM
Last Post: LRE
  Election Commission Asks for More Proofs Against Zardari LRE 0 3,398 02-05-2010 06:39 AM
Last Post: LRE
  CDGL issues maps of official parking stands Lahore_Real_Estate 0 3,477 01-12-2010 02:47 PM
Last Post: Lahore_Real_Estate
  Musharraf seeks entry into politics LahoreEstate 0 3,532 11-28-2009 05:06 AM
Last Post: LahoreEstate
  Musharraf’s face appears on Gilgit-Baltistan Q candidates’ posters: Ch Shujaat upset Naveed Yaseen 0 3,610 11-09-2009 09:40 AM
Last Post: Naveed Yaseen
  ‘Gilgit-Baltistan has potential to produce 40,000 MW electricity’ Naveed Yaseen 0 3,366 10-22-2009 07:31 AM
Last Post: Naveed Yaseen
  20 killed in Peshawar, Bannu, Gilgit blasts Naveed Yaseen 0 3,448 09-27-2009 05:59 AM
Last Post: Naveed Yaseen
  Kaira set to become first governor of Gilgit-Baltistan Naveed Yaseen 0 3,039 08-30-2009 05:28 AM
Last Post: Naveed Yaseen
  Saudi Arabia blocks entry by UAE ID cards due to disputed border image Naveed Yaseen 0 4,056 08-24-2009 05:51 AM
Last Post: Naveed Yaseen
  Benazir’s injured guard again denied entry to Presidency Naveed Yaseen 0 3,129 08-18-2009 07:01 AM
Last Post: Naveed Yaseen

Forum Jump:


User(s) browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)