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Old Wednesday, March 21, 2012
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Art of turning popularity into power
March 21, 2012

Though a chill wind gusts through the garden of his hilltop home above Islamabad, Imran Khan, an all-time cricketing great turned politician, is all fired up.


When his tiny party, the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI), boycotted the 2008 general election, the gesture did not affect the outcome. Now, Pakistan is preparing for another election cycle. A partly new Senate has just been selected by regional representatives, and a general election is due within a year. Not only will Khan take part. He also predicts outright victory: “God willing, we will sweep the election”.

The former captain of Pakistan’s cricket team is untroubled by self-doubt. Critics dub him messianic — as do devotees. He refers to his giant political rallies in Lahore and Karachi late last year as “electric”, “inspiring” and “phenomenal”.

He brushes aside suggestions that crowds were bused in, or that he benefited from help from Pakistan’s powerful spy agency, the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI). Instead, ordinary folk came and donated funds to his party, something unheard of in Pakistan. Karachi saw such “fervour”, even, that “we ended up making a profit”.

He is right to be excited. For 16 years, though well-liked personally, Khan attracted support chiefly from an insignificant bunch of educated youngsters. Recently he has had a string of successes: big rallies, defections from other parties by leading politicians, and encouraging polls. His party’s rise coincides with a slump for the ruling Pakistan Peoples Party, which pollsters now say barely commands 10 per cent support, and the collapse of a rival in Punjab, the Pakistan Muslim League (Quaid-i-Azam).

It all looks too rosy, however. Though polls put support for Khan’s PTI at just below 20 per cent nationally, double its tally a year ago, that may be hard to sustain. In any case, it is hardly enough to sweep to victory. To rule, he would need coalition partners, among them hardline Islamist conservatives who share his anti-Americanism.

Doubts over allies

Doubts persist about other potential allies. Khan’s welcome of veteran politicians, including two former foreign ministers, criticised as lotas (turncoats), has rubbed some shine from his movement. He has to fend off suggestions that he is secretly backed by the army’s top brass, as well as its spies.

It is striking that the men in khaki do not oppose him. Indeed, they cheer him on, relishing the headaches he gives other politicians.

The party under most pressure is Punjab’s dominant force, the Pakistan Muslim League (Nawaz), run by a former prime minister, Nawaz Sharif.

The Sharifs’ main hope is that despite Khan’s personal charms, the PTI lacks the experience to turn popularity into votes and seats. The strength of the established parties, by contrast, lies in having tough local guys in each constituency, pockets bulging with cash, who deliver blocks of voters on election day.

What if the amiable Khan got into office? His priority is wiping out corruption “in 90 days”, by setting a good example and keeping his cabinet and party clean. That is a popular thing to say, but it sounds naive, given the deep-rooted venality in Pakistani politics, not to mention the civil service, courts and army.

And some of his values are less attractive. Khan plays up his religiosity (he breaks off speeches to pray). On March 14, he cancelled a trip to a conference in India because Salman Rushdie, an author who has fallen foul of Muslim fundamentalists, would be there. Of Pakistan’s wretched blasphemy law, which has been used to persecute religious minorities, he says it is “abused”, but he declines to call it wrong in itself.

Khan denies attacking Pakistan’s increasingly beleaguered liberals. He is furious, he says, only with those who support the American policy of drone attacks carried out in Pakistan against perceived terrorists.

His foreign views are not particularly encouraging. He wants India to sort out Kashmir (ie, hand over contested territory) before Pakistan should consider any trade-opening deal with its giant neighbour. This is a way of saying nothing will change. Yet with the Taliban, in both Afghanistan and Pakistan, he seeks engagement and unilateral ceasefires.

Though he is a cricketing celebrity and has been in politics for almost two decades, Khan remains a puzzle. Much of his appeal is as a radical eager to do away with the rottenness in Pakistan’s politics. Yet his weak party, lack of organisation and an inevitable need to compromise cast doubt on his ability to overturn the old order.

The view from Khan’s hilltop mansion is magnificent, but look down and you find a jumble of half-built houses and shops and twisting lanes. The daily mess of life in Pakistan may yet prove too much for even the loftiest of leaders.
Courtesy: The Economist
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