




Take, for instance, the case he made for a national consensus-based Government a couple of weeks after Benazir Bhutto’s assassination on December 27. His trusted men were dispatched to talk to the major political parties, Asif Ali Zardari of the People’s Party and the Sharif brothers of the Muslim League of their own faction. The PPP rejected the idea ahead of the polls and called for an early election, but did not dismiss the possibility of forming a national government after the polls. Nawaz Sharif took up the suggestion but refused to be part of any government presided over by Musharraf. And that’s where the idea was doomed even before it was born. Musharraf backed out of the proposal as instantly as he had floated it.
Other major political parties in the fray include the PML-Q, the MQM and the JUI of Maulana Fazlur Rahman. All three have been the beneficiaries of Musharraf’s tailor-made dispensation. The first two were the ruling coalition partners in Sindh and at the Centre in the last government, while the JUI as part of the six-party religious alliance, the MMA, ruled the Frontier province. The MMA has all but fallen apart after the JUI decided to contest the forthcoming election, with the rest of the component parties sticking to their boycott of the polls. If their track record is anything to go by, the PML-Q, the MQM and the JUI will continue to do the king’s bidding, with or without a national government being a possibility. If one were to ask for a dream government these parties have in mind, it would be the three of them joining hands without a thorn in their side in the form of the PPP or the PML-N (Sharif).
... contd.


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