Muttahida Qaumi Movement – London: Difference between revisions
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===Recent trend=== |
===Recent trend=== |
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|Mr. Altaf Hussain with Governor Sindh Ishrat-ul-Ebad , Salim shazad , Aftab ahmad shaik and others]] |
[[Image:Altaf Bhai.jpg|thumb|right|300px|Mr. Altaf Hussain with Governor Sindh Ishrat-ul-Ebad , Salim shazad , Aftab ahmad shaik and others]] |
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MQM, initially focused on only the [[Urdu]]-speaking people, who migrated to Pakistan after the independence in 1947. Since 1997, it has started to aim downtrodden masses at the national level, with a manifesto to improve low social and economic status of the [[Sindh]]. Although it has turned into a national political party, working in all major cities of Pakistan, its representation in non-Urdu-speaking areas remains negligible. |
MQM, initially focused on only the [[Urdu]]-speaking people, who migrated to Pakistan after the independence in 1947. Since 1997, it has started to aim downtrodden masses at the national level, with a manifesto to improve low social and economic status of the [[Sindh]]. Although it has turned into a national political party, working in all major cities of Pakistan, its representation in non-Urdu-speaking areas remains negligible. |
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Revision as of 15:04, 21 February 2008
Muttahida Qaumi Movement – London | |
---|---|
Leader | Altaf Hussain |
Founded | 1978 |
Headquarters | Karachi, Pakistan |
Ideology | Nationalism, cultural conservatism |
International affiliation | none |
Website | |
www.mqm.org |
Muttahida Qaumi Movement (Urdu: متحدہ قومی موومنٹ) generally known as MQM or simply Muttahida, is the fourth largest political party in the newly elected National Assembly of Pakistan[1]
MQM is the only Pakistani political party which grew out of a student organization. The student organization, All Pakistan Muhajir Students Organization (APMSO) started on 11 June 1978 at the University of Karachi by Altaf Hussain. Hussain remains its leader.[2] APMSO gave birth to Muhajir Qaumi Movement (MQM) on 18 March 1984, which by 1991 "established a virtual monopoly over representation of the Urdu-speaking community in urban Sindh." [3]
On July 26 1997, MQM officially removed the term Muhajir from its name, and replaced it with Muttahida ("United").[4] to, "further the programme of national development" and to carry out "a nation-wide campaign against feudal domination."[5]
MQM claims to be making speedy inroads all over Pakistan.[6]
Political ideology
Official Statement from MQMs Website: "Muttahida Quami Movement (MQM) believes in Realism and Practicalism. Acceptance of reality with an open heart is Realism, a concept based upon the philosophy of its Founder and Leader Mr. Altaf Hussain. Based on Realism positive achievement made through ideologically supported pragmatic programs is called Practicalism."[7]
Key members of MQM Central
- Altaf Hussain - Founder and leader.
- Dr. Imran Farooq Convenor. [8]
- Dr. Farooq Sattar- MQM's Deputy Convenor and party's parliamentray leader in National Assembly of Pakistan.
- Dr. Ishrat-ul-Ebad (Governor of the Sindh province)
- Mustafa Kamal (City Nazim (Mayor) of Karachi)
- (Late)Azeem Ahmed Tariq - Chairman
Politics for service
According to MQM's website, "Nation’s solidarity, integrity and security; progress and prosperity; improvement in common man’s quality of life; stability of democratic institutions; and the substantial reforms in the field of agriculture, trade and industry, education and health, finance and overall economy and judiciary are the cherished goals of Muttahida Qaumi Movement."[9]
MQM & minority rights
MQM Leader, Mr. Altaf Hussain has stated, "We consider all the sects, beliefs and religious minorities and groups as equal citizens. We shall stand by our belief regardless of the consequences and we are prepared to pay the price of our stand." [10] [11]
Political history
Background
Formation of APMSO
A group of Urdu-speaking students of University of Karachi, established a student organization in June 11, 1978, the All Pakistan Muhajir Student Organisation (APMSO) led by Altaf Hussain. The Muhajir people are a Urdu-speaking linguistic group that migrated to Pakistan after its independence in 1947 in the name of Islam. Almost two million[citation needed] Muhajir men, women and children sacrificed their lives during this migration. On 11 June 2006, Altaf Hussain announced to change the name of All Pakistan Muhajir Students Organisation to All Pakistan Muttahida Students Organisation, in an effort to appeal to and embrace all the students of Pakistan.
Making of MQM
In order to fill the political vacuum and bridge the gap between the Urdu-speaking faction and concerned authorities of government, APMSO restructured as "Muhajir Qaumi Movement" on March 18, 1984 [13]. On August 8 1986, the very first public meeting organized by MQM at Karachi's Nishtar park was marked by a huge outcome of people from karachi despite extreme weather conditions. Nearly three million people [citation needed] were reported to be present at the first meeting which was organized by the MQM.
Three-Pronged Strategy of the Ruling Elite: Isolation, Criminalization and Demoralization
Since his self-exile to UK, Altaf Hussain has been talking about Pakistan's ruling elite's policy of "Isolation, Criminalization and Demoralization." Mr. Hussain says that soon after MQM liberated its original constituency, the Muhajirs, from "the clutches" of the politicized clergy, especially that of Jamaat-e-Islami, it was decided to spread the MQM’s circle of influence and ground work to the rest of Pakistn. "We organised the historical national festival in 1990 and announced that the Muhajir Quami Movement (Muhajir National Momement) will be transformed into Muttahida Quami Movement (United National Movement) on 14th August 1992," he said.
The ruling elite, "panicked from this announcement and on 19th June 1992 commenced an army operation against the MQM. During this operation innocent MQM workers were extrajudicially murdered, raids and arrests made and MQM offices sealed. Altaf Hussain’s image was portrayed in Sindh, Punjab, NWFP and Balochistan in such a manner as to present him as the enemy of Punjabis, Baloch, Pakhtoons, Sindhis and Saraikis. Especially in Punjab such was the extent of the poisonous propaganda that no one would be prepared even to listen to the MQM’s message." Mr. Hussain claims that the ruling elite's policy was to socially and culturally isolate the MQM and Altaf Hussain from other communities, ethnic and linguistic identities of the country.
He said, "This was part of the three pronged strategy of the Establishment that basically comprises isolation, criminalization and demoralization. Isolation means to cut-off a person, a group of people or a community from other communities; criminalization means to present a worker of an ideological movement as a criminal and terrorist; demoralization means to demoralise the community through oppression and barbarism."
He also said that nearly every country of the world has utilised the same strategy against the people struggling for their legitimate rights. "We were subject to oppression because we wanted to change the unjust system prevailing in the country and to free the country from the clutches of a few families. The people at the helm of affairs wish to maintain the status-quo whereas we are striving to break this status-quo. In the past, the country was disintegrated for maintaining the status-quo and today if the corrupt feudal system is continuously supported instead of worrying about the country, then the country will have to face difficult times," he said.[14]
1992 military operation
In Sindh, an operation was launched by Pakistan Army on June 19, 1992. Altaf Hussain, the founder of MQM, was urged by his followers to leave the country and relocate in London six months prior to the operation.
Mr. Hussain and several other MQM leaders and workers were accused of being involved in the kidnapping and torture of a Pakistan Army, Major in 1991. Major Kaleem Case was the bedrock of many subsequent governmental and military operations against MQM [15]
On February 6, 1998 the Sindh High Court found all defendants innocent and found the case as one "of almost no legal evidence". [16] [17] Major Kaleem, however, on February 20, 1998, Major Kaleem appealed the decision in Supreme Court and contended, "the High Court erred by acquitting the accused who did not surrender themselves before the trial court. He argued that there was sufficient evidence against the respondents to prove their guilt."[18]
On Monday, August 13, 2007, Major Kaleem Case was dismissed by a three-member Supreme Court bench comprising Justices Mohammad Nawaz Abbasi, Hamid Ali Mirza and Ghulam Rabbani for non-prosecution since the Sindh Government withdrew its appeal, and Major Kaleem and his counsel failed to appear. [19]
On November 1994, the army was withdrawn from law enforcement duties in Sindh, to be replaced with paramilitary Rangers and specially trained police. To remove any revolutionary elements from the party, Government of Pakistan adopted a policy of extra-judicial killing, instead of prosecution. Between 1995 and 1996, hundreds of workers with active association with MQM were extra-judicially killed by Rangers and police, sometimes in cold blood. (Pakistan Chronology 1947-1997, published by Ministry of Information and Media, ISBN 969-507-000-0).
Recent trend
MQM, initially focused on only the Urdu-speaking people, who migrated to Pakistan after the independence in 1947. Since 1997, it has started to aim downtrodden masses at the national level, with a manifesto to improve low social and economic status of the Sindh. Although it has turned into a national political party, working in all major cities of Pakistan, its representation in non-Urdu-speaking areas remains negligible.
MQM boycotted 2001 municipal elections but participated in 2002 national election and secured most of the urban areas seats in Sindh province.[20] Altaf Hussain supported, General Pervez Musharraf's U-turn on Afghan-policy after 9-11 attacks.
In August 2005, Haq Parast candidates, supported by MQM, won the municipal elections in Karachi, Hyderabad, Sukkur, Mirpur Khas and many other cities of Sindh. [21]
At present, MQM is an ally of President Musharraf in federal government but it still has its own viewpoint on various issues including LFO, Kalabagh Dam and NFC Award. [22]
MQM tried to change its policy which restrained it to Urdu-speaking people recently, opening offices in other provinces including Punjab (formerly MQM was famous for anti-Punjab attitude) with no success. Altaf Hussain has himself married a Baloch tribal woman.
It is said MQM has been a [23] major help to USA in their 'War Against Terror'.
Controversies
Hakeem Saeed's murder case
Former Sindh Governor Hakeem Muhammed Saeed was assassinated by alleged MQM-A terrorists[24]. Warrants were later issued for Altaf Hussain in a case related to the murder of the Sindh governor in which 9 other MQM members were sentenced to death [25]. He was, however, acquitted in another case by the Sindh High Court from charges of alleged kidnapping and torture of an army major in 1991.[26]
Kidnapping of Army officers
It is alleged that Major Kaleem, who was then acting in-charge of the field intelligence unit, along with other army personnel Havaldar Moinuddin, Mohammad Yaseen and Nisar Ahmed, were sieged by armed activists of the MQM in the Landhi area Karachi on June 20, 1991. They were in the area following orders by their high ups.
They claimed that they were taken to a place famously called ‘Muhajir Khail’ in Landhi, where they were tortured and kept for seven hours. It was further alleged that conspiracy was hatched under the instigation and directive of the top MQM command. The army personnel were later released and handed over to the SHO Landhi Town police. The FIR of the incident was registered on June 24, 1991.[27]
The MQM leaders were each sentenced to 27 year rigorous imprisonment by a trial court for torturing a serving major of Pakistan Army, Major Kaleem, after kidnapping him from Landhi area in 1992. [28]
However, the convictions in the trial court were overturned by a division bench of Sindh High Court in 1998. But the government had challenged their acquittal in Supreme Court. On Aug 13, 2007, government withdrew its appeal against the acquittal, consequently the Supreme Court disposed off the case and acquitted the MQM leaders. [29] [30]
May 12,2007 Riots
On May 12, 2007, riots erupted across Karachi, capital of the province of Sindh and the most populous city in Pakistan. During the riots city roads were blocked, cars burned and hundreds of people were injured and arrested, most of them political workers. The most recent reports of the incident also included a death count that rose to as high as forty-one people.The violence erupted when MQM, the coalition partner in the provincial government, announced a rally on the same day as the arrival of Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry to address the city bar association on the 50th anniversary of establishment of the Sindh High Court Bar Association. AAJ TV showed live coverage of MQM workers carrying weapons under their MQM flag. These armed men later attacked AAJ TV.Party members of various armed with weapons and firing as well.
See also
- 2007 Karachi riots
- APMSO
- Karachi
- Muhajir
- Urdu
- Nine zero
- Quotas in Pakistan
- List of political parties in Pakistan
References
- ^ Election Commision of Pakistan: Election 2008 Statistics
- ^ Mr. Altaf Hussain's Speech
- ^ Muhajir Qaumi Movement's Warp-Speed Takeoff
- ^ MQM's Journey From Muhajir to Muttahida
- ^ MQM's Official Website
- ^ MQM Supports Musharraf's Strategic Meetings with Political Parties Prior to 2007-2008 Elections
- ^ MQM's Political Ideology
- ^ MQM's Convenor Dr. Imran Farooq's September 2003 Interview with Newsline
- ^ MQM's Vision for an Egalitarian Order Through Local Government
- ^ MQM & Minority Rights
- ^ MQM Praised by Christian Leaders
- ^ MQM's April 15, 2007 Rally "Against Religious Extremism and Baton and Kalashnikov Shariah"
- ^ http://www.mqm.org/ah-int-edgaretimes-201198.htm
- ^ Altaf Hussan's address to the Punjab committee 13 January 2007
- ^ Basis for Operation Against MQM
- ^ Sindh High Court Finds all MQM Leaders and Workers Innocent
- ^ Sindh High Court Finds Altaf Hussain Innocent
- ^ Major Kaleem Appeals in Supreme Court
- ^ Supreme Court Dismisses the Case
- ^ Newsline
- ^ The daily Dawn editorial
- ^ http://www.dawn.com/2005/12/19/top3.htm
- ^ [www.jasara.com]
- ^ http://www.fas.org/irp/world/para/docs/mqm-factsheet.htm
- ^ BBC - Nine MQM members sentenced to death
- ^ http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/world/s/w_asia/54241.stm
- ^ Kidnapping of Army officers
- ^ Pakistan News Service - PakTribune
- ^ Pakistan News Service - PakTribune
- ^ Kidnapping of Army officers
External links
- MQM websites
- MQM official website
- MQM USA official website
- MQM CANADA official website
- MQM UK official website
- MQM SOUTH AFRICA official website
- KHIDMAT-E-KHALQ FOUNDATION (KKF)
- APMSO official website
- Gahwara-e-Adab website
- DAILY AMN official website
- Muttahida sports&recreation club website
- Other