The fickle south rears its head

The region appe­ars ready to do what it has done every election cycle: move in the direction the political wind is blowing.
Published February 7, 2024

By Nasir Jamal

ON a sunny afternoon towards the end of a mostly hazy January, Jahangir Khan Tareen courts a group of PML-N voters at a corner gathering on Multan’s Masoom Shah Road. The country’s wealthiest sugar baron is promising “massive development in the constituency as well as across the city” if they supported his bid for one of Multan’s two constituencies.

“Those who have known me, know I always fulfil my commitments. This constituency and its residents will be my priority after the election — I will not disappoint you,” he says, as chants of ‘Pakistan ko Nawaz Do’ broke out.

“I will stand by Nawaz Sharif,” he hastily adds, perhaps remembering who his audience are.

Tareen has earned quite a reputation as a wheeler-dealer par excellence. In 2018, he played a key role in the formation of the PTI’s governments in Lahore and Islamabad, first by breaking away several so-called ‘electables’ from the N-League’s ranks ahead of the polls, and then herding scores of independent lawmakers from South Punjab into his now former party.

Read more: Jahangir Tareen — looking to deliver on the promise of ‘Naya Pakistan’?

This election, he is being supported by the PML-N on one of the two NA constituencies in Multan. It is quid pro quo for his pivotal role in removing ‘estranged friend’ Imran Khan from power, and for carving the Istehkam-i-Pakistan Party (IPP) out from the PTI.

The southern districts of Punjab once again appear ready to do what they have done every election cycle: move in the direction the political wind is blowing

Mr Tareen is, in fact, running for two National Assembly seats — the other one is from a Lodhran constituency. However, one was the maximum price Mr Sharif was willing to pay, and that too only in Multan, where Mr Sharif was not able to find a candidate strong enough to take on the PTI-backed independent, Amir Dogar. Mr Dogar’s family has lost the seat only once in multiple past contests. In Lodhran, where Mr Tareen won in 2013, he must defeat the PML-N’s Siddique Baloch, who, like Dogar, may prove an equally difficult foe.

Whether he wins or loses one or both of these electoral races, many, like Seraiki activist Prof Akram Mirani, believe that Tareen will remain an important cog in the post-election dispensation.

“With a jet at his disposal and a lot of disposable cash in his pocket, his real job — purchasing independent winners from the region to help the Sharifs form their government — will actually begin post-February 8,” Mr Mirani says.

Meanwhile, his party’s presence is being seen as an aberration in what mostly are three-way races between the PML-N, PTI-backed independents and the PPP across southern Punjab.

The fickle south

The region once again appe­ars ready to do what it has done every election cycle: move in the direction the political wind is blowing. Previous election results from 11 southern districts of the Multan, DG Khan and Bahawalpur divisions clearly show the South hasn’t ever stood by the same party beyond one election cycle.

In the 1990s, the region switched between Nawaz Sharif and Benazir Bhutto. The PML-Q snatched it from the Sharifs in 2002, and the PPP won a majority in 2008. The South then overwhelmingly shifted its loyalties to the N-League in 2013, before finally leaning towards the PTI in 2018.

(LEFT) Yousaf Raza Gillani (NA-148) waves during an interaction with the Christian community in Jameelabad, while Jahangir Khan Tareen (right) speaks to voters in NA-149’s Kalro Basti during his election campaign.
(LEFT) Yousaf Raza Gillani (NA-148) waves during an interaction with the Christian community in Jameelabad, while Jahangir Khan Tareen (right) speaks to voters in NA-149’s Kalro Basti during his election campaign.

The current election cycle is no different. Ever since a crackdown was launched against PTI and its leadership in the wake of the May 9 events, the party has lost several of the ‘electables’ that won it the previous election to the PML-N. At the same time, some legacy politicians and electables from the region, like Sardar Nasrullah Dreshik, Meena and Mohsin Leghari, and Makhdoom Khusro Bakhtiar, have distanced themselves from the party, even if they haven’t joined any other either. Nor are they in the electoral race.

However, this does not mean the PTI has been completely decimated in South Punjab. Far from it: it has successfully retained many of its winning candidates. On top of that, Imran’s unfading popularity across the South has created a strong PTI vote bank in the region.

A wave of sympathy

Makhdoom Javed Hashmi soaks in the sun at the Makhdoom Rasheed residence, some 35 kilometres from Multan, surrounded by local politicians. His house was raided a few days earlier by police. They had been told to prevent a public meeting organised by his nephew, Faraz Hashmi, who is being backed by the PTI for a Punjab Assembly seat from the area.

Meher Bano Qureshi, Shah Mahmood Qureshi’s daughter, was also expected to make speech at the event, which had been organised within the four walls of Hashmi’s sprawling residence. Meher Bano is in the race for the National Assembly seat from the same constituency.

Read more: 8 electoral battles to watch out for on NA seats in Feb 8 elections

Mr Hashmi, an old hand in Pakistan’s politics, was jailed by Gen Pervez Musharraf for refusing to ditch the PML-N. He led the Sharifs’ party after the family decided to go into exile in Saudi Arabia in 2000 after Nawaz’s conviction in the plane hijacking case.

Mr Hashmi later joined Imran Khan sometime before the 2013 elections, but left the PTI when he found Mr Khan to be toeing the establishment’s line. He accused the PTI of weakening the civilian government and democracy with the PTI’s 2014 dharna in Islamabad, later re-joined the Sharifs. However, the PML-N recently refused him a ticket to accommodate Mr Tareen. He has withdrawn from the fight since.

Mr Hashmi insists it will be quite difficult, if not impossible, to prevent an overwhelming victory for the PTI in the South, and insists that the party can repeat its performance from 2018, when it bagged 24 National Assembly seats out of the 46 it contested.

Read more: Javed Hashmi, the perennial rebel

“This is despite the fact that the party is in the fray without an election symbol, with its ‘independent’ candidates being aggressively hounded, its candidates getting arrested on frivolous charges, and their can­vassing impeded by the district administration and police.”

Real or perceived — the persecution being faced by Imran Khan and his party is causing considerable disquiet among the young and working-class voters.

“If this rage makes them vote in strong numbers on the polling day — and they are not thwarted in this by the administration — the PML-N will find it really tough to win a respectable number of seats in the South,” Hashmi believes. The PML-N had bagged 11 NA seats from the region in the previous polls, down from 27 in 2013.

“The PTI still remains the most popular party in the South despite crackdowns and persecution. If we have a free and fair election today, it will sweep the entire southern region of Punjab,” he contends.

“The police are not letting PTI-backed candidates canvass anywhere in the region, but I still believe that the establishment will not be able to prevent a big majority of the PTI-backed candidates from winning the polls,” he concludes.

If that happens, it wouldn’t be short of a miracle.

The PPP factor

The PPP is yet another strong contender in the South, where it has strong pockets of voters based in different districts like Rahim Yar Khan, Multan, Muzaffargarh, Layyah, DG Khan. The last time the party gained a strong foothold in region was in 2008, when it won 21 seats, and conceded nine to the PML-N and 11 to the PML-Q. In 2013, both the PPP and PTI bagged two constituencies each, but the PPP’s share rose to five in the last elections. Many insist that the PPP can win at least 10-12 seats or more this time.

“It appears that the PPP is able to campaign freely this time around,” Prof Mirani says. “I’ll be surprised if the PPP fails to transform its expectations into seats. I cannot say how many constituencies it will manage to win though,” says the professor.

Not an easy fight

Senior Multan-based journalist Mazhar Javed believes that on paper, the N-League appears to have dominated the electoral scene; however, it will not be smooth sailing for Nawaz and his party.

“The PML-N has a free hand in the southern districts, as it does in Central Punjab. Unlike its rival PTI, it can freely hold rallies and public gatherings whenever and wherever it likes. None of its candidates have faced any serious problems in the filing of their nomination papers and their scrutiny.

“They also have faced no hurdles in door-to-door canvassing. These facilities are certainly not available to the PTI. Even the PPP, the second most important rival of the PML-N in South Punjab, has sometimes complained of the electoral field being ‘too level’ in favour of the PML-N. Nevertheless, it is going to face stiff competition from PTI-backed and other independent candidates,” Mr Javed argues.

Read more: Swinging between the victor and the vanquished

Prof Mirani does not agree that the PML-N is “dominating” the electoral scene.

“The party may be the only option the army has for now, and it may win the majority of the races, but the reality is that it is not popular. It has the required infrastructure, but it cannot sweep the region or even come close to its 2013 performance,” Mirani insists.

Human rights lawyer from Bahawalpur Faisal Mahmood Khan Tangwani says the PML-N is seen by the voters as a ruling party in the making.

“There is a perception among voters that the powers that be have decided to bring the party to power through the Thursday polls. This has led to a general apprehension among non-PMLN voters that, no matter how they vote, Nawaz Sharif will still be made prime minister. This could lead to many of them either abstaining from voting or casting their votes in favour of the PML-N so that they, too, can get the spoils from having voted for the ruling party.”

“At the same time, the PML-N also has a formidable list of candidates and a strong vote bank based on its development work in the region,” he states. “Its 16 months in power between April 2022 and August 2023 allowed it to throw some goodies at this electorate and release development funds to its candidates for publicly visible projects, such as roads and bridges.”

Yet, he agrees that the PML-N’s path to victory in South Punjab will not be without difficulty. “The perception of being seen as a pro-establishment party may hurt those voters who it mobilised on anti-establishment slogans in the 2018 elections and afterwards. Its dismal economic performance during its 16-month government has also alienated many.”

Read more: Nawaz, Maryam have a fair chance in Lahore’s NA-130, NA-119

Moreover, the PML-N has also not really helped its cause by awarding election tickets to turncoats from the PTI. This has alienated voters and triggered defections. Besides, the PML-N is facing an electoral field where, unlike past races, the competition is multi-faceted.

“In the past, if there was a third contender, it was always a minor presence. Now, all major and minor players are in the field, and given the persecution being faced by the PTI, it has the capacity to mobilise anti-N-league voters in South Punjab, which, quoting former president Zardari, far surpass the pro-N voters,” Mr Javed remarks. He also notes that the PML-N has not been able to attract electables in a large enough number despite pressure from the powers that be.

As they say, the battle for the federation and Punjab may be fought in its central districts, but the war is won or lost in South Punjab. For Nawaz Sharif, the bumpy road to Islamabad can become even bumpier if his party doesn’t do well enough in the south. Whichever way one looks at it, the region will remain crucial to PML-N’s bid for power.

Published in Dawn, February 7th, 2024

By Imran Gabol

THE PML-N seems to have shot itself in the foot in Multan by going for a seat adjustment with the Istehkam-i-Pakistan Party (IPP) and accommodating PTI turncoats. These decisions have cost it the support of local loyalists and supporters, who are disillusioned with the party’s leadership and have started supporting its rivals.

Multan

The PML-N is contesting five National Assembly seats in Multan and supporting IPP patron-in-chief Jahangir Khan Tareen on the sixth. It awarded tickets in three of those constituencies, NA-148, NA-150 and NA-153, to PTI turncoats.

In NA-148, it gave its ticket to former PTI MNA Ahmad Hassan Dehar and sidelined Malik Sikandar Bosan, whose brother was given a ticket for PP-213 instead. PPP former prime minister Yusuf Raza Gillani and the PTI’s Barrister Taimur Malik are the other strong candidates from this constituency.

Read more: The ‘secret marriage’ between PML-N and IPP

The decision to support Mr Tareen in NA-149, instead of giving a ticket to either Makhdoom Javed Hashmi or former MNA Sheikh Tariq Rasheed did not go down well with supporters, who outright refused to run a campaign for Babar Shah in PP-216, as he was reportedly awarded a ticket on Mr Tareen’s recommendation.

The divisions benefitted the PTI’s candidate in the constituency, Malik Amir Dogar, and improved his panel’s prospects of winning from NA-149 as well as its provincial constituencies.

Similarly, the ticket given to former PTI MPA Javed Ansari in NA-150 caused a dent in the PML-N’s support in the constituency, prompting its long-time supporters, Senator Rana Mehmoodul Hassan and his clan, to leave the party. They joined the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) and are contesting against the PML-N from the same constituency. Meanwhile, the PTI has fielded Zain Qureshi in NA-150.

The PML-N’s decision to hand Salman Naeem the PP-218 ticket also enraged old workers, who believe Naeem ‘hijacked’ the party, opposed awarding a ticket to stalwarts Rana Mehmoodul Hassan and former provincial minister Chaudhry Abdul Waheed Arain in NA-150, and supported Javed Ansari instead. Arain was a silent spectator during the campaigning process and did not throw his weight behind the PML-N’s candidate.

Read more: Sharifs’ ‘limited allocation’ leaves IPP in a lurch

In NA-151, the PML-N fielded Abdul Ghafar Dogar against the PPP’s Ali Musa Gillani and PTI’s Meher Bano Qureshi. In its connected provincial assembly constituencies, the PP-219 ticket was given to turncoat Dr Akhtar Malik, while stalwart Rana Iqbal Siraj left the party for the PPP after being denied the ticket for PP-220. He will be contesting against the PML-N’s candidate, Rai Mansab Ali Khan, and the PTI’s Zahid Bahar Hashmi for the seat.

In NA-152, PML-N candidate Javed Ali Shah was an uncontroversial choice, but there were differences among supporters over the allotment of provincial assembly tickets to a former PTI MPA, Mian Tariq Abdullah, in PP-221. Furthermore, former PML-N MPA Rana Tahir Shabbir is contesting against the party in PP-222 on a PPP ticket after being denied by his own party.

Meanwhile, the PML-N’s PP-222 candidate, Rana Ijaz Noon, is supporting PPP candidate Abdul Qadir Gillani in NA-152, as the PML-N’s candidate in NA-152, Javed Ali Shah, has fielded his cousin, Mujahid Ali Shah, as an independent candidate for PP-222.

Finally, in NA-153, the PML-N allotted its ticket to former PTI MNA Rana Qasim Noon, leaving Dewan Ashiq Bukhari, a former PML-N MNA, without a ticket in the constituency. Mr Bukhari is now contesting from NA-153 as an independent and has also fielded his son, Dewan Abbas Bukhari, against the PML-N candidate from PP-224.

Read more: A bumpy ride on the ‘G.T. Road to power’

The PML-N’s moves have significantly reshaped the political landscape in Multan, leading to a series of defections and realignments. It remains to be seen how these decisions will impact the election results and the future political scenario.

Dera Ghazi Khan

This district, known for its tribal politics, has been buzzing with activity. The district has three National Assembly seats (NA-184, NA-185, and NA-186) and six provincial assembly seats. The caste and tribe affiliations of the candidates and voters are expected to play a significant role in the election outcomes.

For example, NA-184 is witnessing a battle between two tribal chiefs: Sardar Zulfiqar Khan Khosa, who heads the Khosa tribe, and Javed Lund, chief of the Lund tribe. Both are independent candidates, with the PML-N’s Abdul Qadir Khosa and the PTI’s Ali Rata Khalol also in the contest.

Read more: The ‘kingmaker’ of KP politics

The area, which includes Shadin Lund, Shah Saddardin, Kala Colony, and Kot Mubarak, is mostly populated by the Khosa tribe but houses a significant population of the Lund tribe as well. Abdul Qadir Khosa, who is ahead in the race, was accused of using the state’s machinery to garner voter support. Javed Lund, who is also contesting from PP-286, seems to have focused most of his attention on the provincial assembly seat.

In PP-287, the candidates are PTI’s Ikhlaq Bidani, the PML-N’s Osama Fayyaz Leghari, and the PPP’s Dost Muhammad Khosa. It covers part of DG Khan city and the Bela area. The constituency has a large Khosa presence and was the constituency from where Dost Muhammad Khosa became CM of Punjab in the past.

NA-185 is a test of loyalties, as the race features PTI-backed Zartaj Gul, the PPP’s Dost Muhammad Khosa, and independent candidate Mahmood Qadir Leghari. The constituency includes parts of DG Khan city and Kot Chhuta. Dost Muhammad Khosa is the favoured candidate due to his tribal chief status and because he has the support of the PML-N’s MPA candidate, Syed Abdul Aleem Shah. Zartaj Gul was earlier not available to campaign and joined the campaign only two days ago.

The candidates in PP-288 are the PML-N’s Syed Aleem Shah, Hanif Pitafi as an independent, and PTI-backed Iqbal Saqib Advocate. Independent candidates Hanif Pitafi and Mahmood Qadir Leghari are supporting each other at the provincial and national level, and Mahmood Qadir Legahri also has the support of Awais Leghari in the constituency.

Read more: PTI’s Zartaj Gul denied public rally despite permission

Mahmood Qadir Leghari and Dost Muhammad Khosa are also candidates for PP-289, which includes Kot Chhutta, where Legharis are in the majority.

NA-186 has PML-N’s Awais Leghari, the PPP’s Dost Muhammad Khosa, and PTI-backed Mahar Sajjad Chheena contesting for the seat. The constituency, which includes Fort Munro, Sakhi Sarwar, Choti Bala, Choti Zairen Mana Ahmadani, and Darkhast Jamal Khan, is a stronghold of the Leghari tribe. Awais Leghari, who is the tribal chief, is said to have personally overseen the delimitation carried out by the ECP in DG Khan and succeeded in gathering his tribe’s voters in his native constituency.

Awais Leghari is also contesting from PP-290 against the PTI’s Mohiuddin Khosa. The constituency covers Darkhast Jamal Khan, Kot Chuta rural area, Mana Ahmadani, and Basti Fuaja. This constituency’s politics is very tribal in nature, which will be a major factor in favour of the patron of the Leghari tribe.

Meanwhile, the PPP’s Ramzan Qadir, PML-N’s Muhammad Ahmad Leghari and PTI’s Faheem Saeed Changwani are contesting for PP- 291, which covers Sakhi Sarwar, Fort Munro, Choti Bala and Choti Zairain.

Published in Dawn, February 7th, 2024