because the army would take action against every criminal, he added.
The Karachi operation was being carried out with the support of the Centre and the Sindh government was being informed about the details only when required, Sethi said, adding that the action against the MQM would continue.
He said the army chief’s latest statement in Karachi was important, in which he said the destabilisation was under a planned effort, meaning that something was going to happen, as the statement might have been aimed at India because no party could work against national security without external help. More evidences with linkages to India would appear, Sethi added.
According to Sethi, the army is carrying out the operation on the basis of intelligence information but the political parties have political objectives. That’s the reason the PPP has not owned the operation.
Had the federal government and the Pemra taken action on Altaf Hussain’s speech, the army would not have to react. The army thinks that it is acting in national interest but the Sindh government is not assisting, with the federal government’s response not being up to the mark.
The reason behind not owning the operation fully is that they fear about the future in case the operation produces a consequence going against them, as the operation is not in their control. Sethi said Sindh Governor Ishrat-ul-Ebad had lost the confidence of both the army and the MQM. Three former army chiefs - Ziaul Haq, Aslam Beg and Pervez Musharraf - supported Muttahida which always enjoyed good relations with the political generals, he said, adding that Gen Asif Nawaz, the army chief in 1992 when the operation was launched previously, and the current chief, Gen Raheel Sharif, had no political ambitions.
Whenever Altaf praised the army, the objective was that they would support the military, if martial law was imposed, but the army too would have to back them, he said, adding that Altaf was unhappy after the army started to cleanse Karachi without playing politics.