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Thursday March 28, 2024

Political parties being confined to provinces: Afrasiab

By News Desk & Moayyed Jafri
November 20, 2017
LAHORE: Senator Afrasiab Khattak has said political parties subjected to breakups and they are being confined to provinces.
He said there exists a state within state in Pakistan. The narrative has been hijacked, he said.
Speaking in a session at the International Faiz Festival 2017 on Sunday, he said that political engineering was under way in the state, and political parties were experiencing making-and-breaking process, and they were being limited to different provinces.
He said we created and mentored Taliban and linked state with power. He said the country needed a new Charter of Democracy to end the current political crisis in Pakistan.
Afrasiab said had General Pervez Musharraf been tried and made to stand in the dock, no moves would have been made from behind the curtains today.
He said it was a pity that an accused of treason had been made the head of a 23-party alliance.
He said CPEC (China-Pakistan Economic Corridor) politics was in the interest of Pakistan. However, political parties would have to avoid the politics of occupying ‘Takht-e-Pakistan’ and ‘Takht-e-Lahore’.
Afrasiab said it might be the last chance for Pakistan to decide once and for all its cultural and social identities. With tongue-in-cheek, he said: “We should play to our strengths; either we should accept the CPEC and adopt a progressive approach, eliminating radicalism from our roots, or we should accept that our best brand is alt-right and start exporting that brand to other countries.”
Pakistan People’s Party leader Senator Aitzaz Ahsan said that for how long we would keep holding the judges, general and establishment responsible for political engineering of the state. He said the age of suppression and everything related to it would change only when we would change ourselves.
Aitzaz said he did not believe in the word ‘minority’ in a democracy as it is demeaning and belittling. There are no minorities; everyone has equal rights according to the Constitution of the country. He suggested that the minorities in the country should be considered ‘better Pakistanis’.
Punjab Minister Mujtaba Shujaur Rehman said the government was not afraid at all. However, he added, political and religion should not be mixed, and these should be treated separately. He said sit-ins are held in a democratic dispensation only, as dictatorships never allow such things.
Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf leader Asad Umar said on the occasion the current state of affairs at Faizabad and all such drags on the country’s progress find their roots in Ziaul Haq era. He said it is not easy for any government, no matter how progressive and powerful it may be, to destroy that narrative completely. This narrative, he added, has been woven intricately with religious beliefs of poorly-educated Pakistanis and they deem it an attack on their faith. He said the way forward was difficult and all mainstream political parties and the establishment would need to formulate an aggressive protocol to eliminate this narrative for good.
Dr Asim Sajjad of Awami Worker Party said that here arises a question whether we wanted to live in General Ziaul Haq’s Pakistan today. He said a powerful lobby was pushing aside politics of ideology.
Meanwhile, various sessions at the Faiz International Festival 2017, like Faiz’s poetry, continued at Alhamra halls. Every single one of the 27 sessions on the concluding day of the festival was packed beyond capacity as the entertainment-starved Lahorites thronged the venue. There were hundreds who couldn’t even make it into the sessions and had to wait outside. The festival, however, had something for them too as live music renditions to Faiz and workshops continued outside the four halls.
The festival had something for everyone, from those politically inclined to the artsy, literature savvy, the glamour dazzled and those into performing arts. From the Kathak performance of Yasmeen Sheikh to the nostalgic rendezvous of events that shaped the country’s literature with the likes of Zahra Nigah, Asghar Nadeem Syed and Dr Arifa Syeda and the book launch session with the authors themselves. Mahira Khan’s session was by far the biggest attraction for the millennials, who had thronged the entrance to Alhamra Hall-II.