In Pakistan’s ‘City of Saints,’ age-old feudal rivals fight it out in closely watched election contest

Special In Pakistan’s ‘City of Saints,’ age-old feudal rivals fight it out in closely watched election contest
Meher Bano Qureshi, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf-backed candidate, is pictured speaking to Arab News Pakistan in Multan, Pakistan, on February 3, 2024. (AN photo)
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Updated 05 February 2024
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In Pakistan’s ‘City of Saints,’ age-old feudal rivals fight it out in closely watched election contest

In Pakistan’s ‘City of Saints,’ age-old feudal rivals fight it out in closely watched election contest
  • Qureshi and Gilani families of Multan have built political power on large landholdings, status as guardians of Sufi shrines
  • PTI-backed candidate Taimur Malik says people have rejected influential families and old-style patronage politics

MULTAN: Meher Bano Qureshi waved at the charged crowd of supporters chanting her name and showering her with rose petals as she climbed out of the imposing, black SUV in Multan in central Pakistan, where her family has built its political power on its status as guardians of one of the city’s many ornate, centuries-old Sufi shrines.

But as millions of Pakistanis go to the polls on Feb. 8, Qureshi is counting on something more temporal than prayers to tempt voters: the wild popularity of jailed former Prime Minister Imran Khan, whose Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party she is backed by. 

Her father Shah Mahmood Qureshi, Khan’s deputy in his party and foreign minister when the ousted PM ruled from 2018-2022, is the makhdoom, or guardian, of a prominent shrine and a large landowner to boot. Like dozens of other PTI leaders, Shah is barred from running in upcoming elections marred by widespread accusations of pre-poll rigging and interference by a military that Khan is widely believed to have fallen out with in the last months of his premiership. The army says it does not interfere in politics. 

“Within this constituency [NA-151] and within Pakistan, you can see that Imran Khan’s message is resonating with the people and they can see that this man walks the talk,” Qureshi, who is in her early forties, told Arab News in an interview, adding that a number of back to back jail sentences for Khan announced this month had only bolstered his popularity and those of the candidates supporting him. 

This month, her father was also awarded a 10-year jail sentence along with Khan in what has popularly come to be called the “cipher case,” in which the two are accused of leaking official secrets. Khan says all cases against him are politically motivated to keep him and his PTI out of elections. 

With its top leaders in prison, the PTI’s election contest has been further complicated by the election commission stripping the party of its unifying symbol of the bat, saying it had not conducted intra-party elections, a legal requirement. All candidates for the party now have to contest as independents, each with its own symbol. 

But the party and candidates like Qureshi believe the state-backed crackdown has only made them more popular.

“Today he [Khan] is in jail, my father [Shah] who was going to contest from here, he is also in jail,” Qureshi said. “They haven’t compromised, they have stood their ground, they have stood by the people of Pakistan and the people of Pakistan can see that and they appreciate it and therefore, they are standing with us.”

However, she admitted that the election race had been difficult due to “state highhandedness” which she described as being at an “unrelenting level.”

“It is a level that we haven’t seen before in any elections in Pakistan and this is a very unique election in terms of that,” Qureshi said. 

“Once we visit somewhere, even if it is a 50-person corner meeting, or a 15-person corner meeting, they are visited by police, they are given phone calls by local police and so, people are genuinely very fearful,” the candidate said, describing a pattern of intimidation she said the PTI and candidates backed by it were facing.




The picture taken on February 3, 2024, shows a vehicle decorated with the postures of the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party in Multan, Pakistan. (AN photo)

The caretaker government which is overseeing elections has repeatedly said all parties are being provided fair competition for the Feb. 8 polls while the military denies it interferes in election activities other than when asked by the election commission to provide security. 

“POLITICS OF DEVELOPMENT”

Up against Qureshi is the Gilani family led by ex-prime minister Yousaf Raza Gilani, currently a senator and a large landowner who commands the loyalty of thousands of devotees in the ancient city. Both clans are typical of the rural families that dominate politics in the main battleground province of Punjab, from where almost half the members of parliament will be elected.

In Multan’s NA-151, the largest constituency in Punjab in terms of land area, Qureshi’s is up against Ali Musa Gilani, the son of the older Gilani, backed by the Pakistan People’s Party.




The picture taken on February 3, 2024, shows people putting up banners of the Pakistan Peoples Party in Multan, Pakistan. (AN photo)

“The Qureshi family remained in power so many times, but they did nothing for the people of Multan and southern Punjab,” Ali told Arab News in an interview during campaigning activities this month.

“The Gilani family, whenever it came [to power], they did the politics of development, so, the people know who works for their welfare.” 

“We have done development projects worth billions of rupees in Multan and people know the Gilanis deliver on their promises,” the older Yousaf Raza Gilani told Arab News.

Out of six National Assembly constituencies in Multan, Meher Bano Qureshi and her brother Zain Qureshi are contesting from two separate seats. 

The older Gilani is contesting for a National Assembly seat, NA-148, with his son, Ali Haider Gilani, as the provincial assembly candidate. His two other sons, Ali Musa Gilani, and Abdul Qadir Gilani, are also contesting two separate National Assembly seats. All the Gilanis are candidates for the Pakistan Peoples Party.

Ali said he was confident the PPP would win from Multan and South Punjab and form the government in Punjab and at the center. 

“We will clean sweep Rahim Yar Khan, Muzaffargarh, Multan and I think we will win a seat from Lodhran,” Gilani said, naming multiple cities in southern Punjab. “And a seat from Bahawalpur and Bahawalnagar.”

“THE PEOPLE ARE FED UP”

In another Multan constituency, NA-148, the competition is between Yousaf Raza Gilani and Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) heavyweight, Malik Ahmed Hussain Deharr, and PTI-backed Barrister Taimur Malik.

Speaking to Arab News, Deharr said if voted into power, PML-N founder and three-time prime minister Nawaz Sharif would work with Pakistan’s powerful military on a “charter of economy” to steer the country from economic crisis. 

“I have high hopes that in the next five years, we will cover International Monetary Fund (IMF) loans and all that, and Pakistan will flourish,” Deharr told Arab News.

Malik on the other hand rejected politics dominated by influential families who have ruled for decades through patronage and the support of the army. 

“I really want to do politics of representation, politics of representing the wishes of the people, their grievances and of lawmaking in parliament which is a dire need for this country,” Malik told Arab News.

“The people are fed up with electing the same people, the people are fed up with going to their [feudal leaders’] deras [homes] and seeking their involvement in local issues,” he said. “People want educated [candidates] like myself who are also from the local area.”

Qureshi rebuffed Malik’s criticism about her feudal and political roots. 

“I am an educated woman,” she said. “I should be able to come forward once I fulfill the ideological criteria of a political party and be able to contribute to that party and to my country.”


Karachi gears up for Champions Trophy with special arrangements

Karachi gears up for Champions Trophy with special arrangements
Updated 24 sec ago
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Karachi gears up for Champions Trophy with special arrangements

Karachi gears up for Champions Trophy with special arrangements
  • Security for the tournament was discussed among senior police, Rangers and administration officials
  • The authorities will run a special shuttle service between designated parking spots and the stadium

KARACHI: The administration in Karachi, set to host the inaugural match of the ICC Champions Trophy next month, announced on Friday a series of special measures to ensure the tournament's success and provide a memorable experience for spectators.
Pakistan will host the tournament from February 19 to March 9 across venues in Lahore, Islamabad and Karachi. A hybrid model has been adopted for the event, as India’s matches will be played in Dubai after it showed reluctance to play in Pakistan, citing security concerns.
A meeting to review the arrangements was held under the chairmanship of Karachi Commissioner Syed Hassan Naqvi.
“It was decided that foolproof security would be provided during the event,” said an official statement from the commissioner’s office.
“The stadium’s surroundings and routes leading to it would be decorated,” it continued. “Special parking arrangements would be made, and a shuttle service would be provided from parking spots to the stadium.”
The meeting was attended by senior officials from the police, Rangers and other relevant institutions.
Among the participants were also the director-general of the Trade Development Authority of Pakistan and representatives of the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB).
PCB’s General Manager of the National Stadium Arshad Khan provided a detailed briefing on the tournament schedule.
The ICC Champions Trophy 2025 will feature eight teams competing in 15 matches. Group A includes Pakistan, India, New Zealand and Bangladesh, while Group B comprises South Africa, Australia, Afghanistan and England.
The opening match of the tournament will see Pakistan facing New Zealand on February 19 in Karachi.
The event is expected to strengthen Pakistan’s international cricket profile, particularly as it works to meet public expectations for hosting such a major championship.


Government says talks with Imran Khan’s party to continue despite his 14-year sentence

Government says talks with Imran Khan’s party to continue despite his 14-year sentence
Updated 34 min 26 sec ago
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Government says talks with Imran Khan’s party to continue despite his 14-year sentence

Government says talks with Imran Khan’s party to continue despite his 14-year sentence
  • Barrister Aqeel Malik, government’s legal spokesperson, calls negotiations and conviction ‘separate matters’
  • An analyst predicts ‘more direct talks’ between PTI and the security establishment after the court verdict

KARACHI: A government spokesperson said on Friday political negotiations with former Prime Minister Imran Khan’s opposition Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) would not be affected by an accountability court verdict earlier in the day, which sentenced the ex-premier to 14 years in prison.
Khan, who has been incarcerated for well over a year, warned of civil disobedience from a high-security prison in Rawalpindi last month while calling for the release of political prisoners from his party, which has complained of a government crackdown since the downfall of the PTI administration in April 2022.
Subsequently, the government-PTI talks began as an attempt to reduce political bitterness and polarization in Pakistan. However, the accountability court’s verdict in a case involving a charitable entity, Al-Qadir Trust, set up by Khan and his third wife Bushra Khan in 2018, has raised questions about the future of the negotiations.
The court also sentenced Khan’s wife to seven years in prison in the case. Pakistani authorities allege that the trust was a front for the couple to receive valuable land as a bribe from real estate developer Malik Riaz Hussain, one of Pakistan’s richest and most powerful businessmen. Hussain, like Khan and Bushra, denies any wrongdoing.

“The talks are going on in parallel,” Barrister Aqeel Malik, government spokesperson for legal affairs, told Arab News over the phone. “These are two separate matters. The decision from the court should not be mixed with the ongoing talks with the opposition at this particular time.”
Malik argued that the case was decided in accordance with the legal provisions of the accountability laws.
“Today’s decision is in accordance with the law and justice has been served, where a huge loss had been caused to the national exchequer for private gains,” he added. “It has now been decided by the competent court that Mr. Khan stands certified to have been involved in corruption.”

Pakistan’s imprisoned former prime minister Imran Khan’s supporters hold Khan’s portraits during a protest in Peshawar on January 17, 2025. (AFP)

The Al-Qadir Trust case, involving allegations of corruption and misuse of authority by Khan, revolved around £190 million recovered from the Pakistani real estate tycoon, who was investigated by British authorities for money laundering.
Riaz surrendered the amount as part of a settlement, which was returned to the Pakistani state under the laws of the United Kingdom. However, the Khan administration allegedly adjusted it against the real estate developer’s liability in Pakistan’s top court, where he was fined in a case for illegally acquiring land for a major project in Karachi.
The ex-premier was criticized for using the sum to reduce Riaz’s owed amount rather than depositing it in Pakistan’s national treasury. The country’s anti-graft National Accountability Bureau also accused him of approving the adjustment in return for financial benefits.
Unlike Malik, Khan’s close aide and senior PTI leader, Sayed Zulfikar Bukhari, described the talks as a political ploy by the government.
“Talks were just a bluff,” he told Arab News, adding that it was “obvious” the PTI founding leader and his wife would be sentenced in the case.
“Al-Qadir Trust is a nonprofit organization. Neither of them was a beneficiary, and the money had gone to the Supreme Court of Pakistan,” he continued, describing the verdict as another act of “political victimization and a pressure tactic to make Khan agree to talks.”
The former premier’s conviction has come at a time when the PTI confirmed meetings with Pakistan’s powerful army chief, General Asim Munir, earlier this week, although security sources denied that the interaction focused on political matters.

Former prime minister Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaaf (PTI) party’s chairman and barrister Gohar Ali Khan (C) speaks to media outside the Adiala prison in Rawalpindi on January 17, 2025. (AFP)

Nadia Naqi, a talk show host and political analyst, said the verdict could pave the way for “more direct talks with the security establishment” of Pakistan, which she said was always interested in negotiating with a weaker Khan.
“Negotiations now, which have taken place within political circles, will become easier because a weak Imran Khan, a convicted Imran Khan, will be more likely to agree to the terms [offered to him] compared to a Khan who has obtained bail in various cases,” she argued.
“I believe that negotiations with the PTI will now move forward. Whether the government is involved or not, it won’t matter,” she added.
Iftikhar Ahmed, a Lahore-based analyst, said the future of the talks would depend on the reactions of both the government and the PTI.
“Until now, the PTI has not announced that they are ending the negotiations,” he noted. “The party did not offer this as a condition for negotiations that the courts should not announce their verdicts against Khan. Their demand was the release of the founder of their party.”

Meanwhile, Aitzaz Ahsan, a veteran lawyer and politician, maintained that the judgment against Khan had legal loopholes.
“This is another case in which the conviction will be converted into an acquittal by a high court,” he said, adding that the government had to show the state had suffered a financial loss due to Khan’s decision about the repatriated money, pointing out this was not adequately done.

 


Shakeel and Rizwan lead Pakistan recovery in fog-hit first Test against West Indies

Shakeel and Rizwan lead Pakistan recovery in fog-hit first Test against West Indies
Updated 17 January 2025
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Shakeel and Rizwan lead Pakistan recovery in fog-hit first Test against West Indies

Shakeel and Rizwan lead Pakistan recovery in fog-hit first Test against West Indies
  • Bad light in Multan ended play with just 41.3 overs bowled, with the hosts on 143-4
  • Shakeel and Rizwan added 97 after coming together with Pakistan in trouble at 46-4

MULTAN: Saud Shakeel and Mohammad Rizwan hit unbeaten half-centuries to lead a Pakistan fightback in the first Test against the West Indies on Friday as the hosts reached 143-4 at the close of a fog-hit opening day.
When bad light in Multan ended play with just 41.3 overs bowled, Shakeel was on 56 for his ninth half-century and Rizwan was 51 not out for his 11th.
The pair added 97 after coming together with Pakistan in real trouble at 46-4.
The left-right combination of Shakeel and Rizwan negotiated the three-spinner West Indies attack with aplomb after fast bowler Jayden Seales initially left the home team struggling.
“This pitch is tough to bat on,” said Rizwan.
“We batted with caution and just took advantage of loose balls. It’s tough to judge what should be a good total, but we will target 300 plus.”
Sensing the dry and grassless Multan Stadium pitch will be tricky for batting on the last two days — and with spin set to play a major role — the home team opted to bat after winning the toss.
But play was delayed because of early morning fog compounded by poor air quality, resulting in limited visibility and wiping out the first session.
Shakeel has so far cracked four boundaries while Rizwan has seven hits to the fence.
Seales finished with 3-21 off 10 overs.
“My aim was to build pressure and get wickets,” he said. “I sense spin will play a major role on this pitch going forward.”
Both teams started with three spinners and just one frontline fast bowler, and the tourists opened the bowling with left-arm spinner Gudakesh Motie alongside Seales.
It was Seales who provided the breakthrough, forcing an edge off debutant Muhammad Hurraira to wicketkeeper Tevin Imlach in the sixth over. Hurraira scored six.
Three overs later, Motie dismissed skipper Shan Masood off a faint edge to the wicketkeeper for 11, before Seales trapped Kamran Ghulam leg-before with a sharp incoming delivery for five.
It became 46-4 when Babar Azam edged Seales behind the wicket for eight, continuing a poor run of scores at home for Pakistan’s premier batter.
The two-match series is part of the World Test Championship. Pakistan currently rank eighth and the West Indies ninth and last.


Security forces kill five militants in northwest Pakistan

Security forces kill five militants in northwest Pakistan
Updated 17 January 2025
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Security forces kill five militants in northwest Pakistan

Security forces kill five militants in northwest Pakistan
  • The military says weapons and ammunition were recovered from the militants
  • Pakistan has been targeting TTP fighters in intelligence-based operations in KP

KARACHI: Pakistan’s security forces killed five militants, including a key commander, during an intelligence-based operation in the country’s northwest, the military said on Friday.
The operation, which took place in Tirah, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province, comes as Pakistani authorities face increasing attacks by the banned Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) from neighboring Afghanistan.
Earlier this week, Pakistan’s army chief, General Asim Munir, assured political stakeholders in KP that the military would not launch a full-scale operation against the TTP but would continue targeted, intelligence-based actions to counter the group.
“On 17 January 2025, Security Forces conducted an intelligence-based operation in general area Tirah, Khyber District on reported presence of khwarij [TTP militants],” the military’s media wing, the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), said in a statement.
“During the conduct of operation, own troops effectively engaged khwarij location, as a result of which, five khwarij including kharji ring leader Abidullah @ Turab, were sent to hell, while one kharji was apprehended,” it added.
The ISPR noted that weapons and ammunition were recovered after the raid.
The slain militants, including the commander, were linked to several instances of extremist violence targeting both security forces and civilians.
Tirah was a major hotbed of militant activity during the 2000s and early 2010s, serving as a stronghold for groups like the TTP, Lashkar-e-Islam and Al Qaeda-linked factions.
Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif praised the security forces for the successful operation, commending their efforts to combat militancy.
“The entire nation stands with our security forces in the ongoing fight against terrorism,” he said in a statement released by his office. “We are determined to eradicate terrorism in all its forms from the country.”


‘Proud moment’ as Pakistan launches first indigenous satellite to predict natural disasters

‘Proud moment’ as Pakistan launches first indigenous satellite to predict natural disasters
Updated 17 January 2025
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‘Proud moment’ as Pakistan launches first indigenous satellite to predict natural disasters

‘Proud moment’ as Pakistan launches first indigenous satellite to predict natural disasters
  • PM Sharif praises all Pakistani scientists and engineers working on the project for their team effort
  • The country’s military calls the development ‘a momentous milestone in Pakistan’s space journey’

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif called it a “proud moment” for the nation as China launched Pakistan’s first indigenously developed Electro-Optical (EO-1) satellite into space on Friday, aiming to monitor mineral resources and predict natural disasters.
The EO-1 satellite was launched from China’s Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center, following work by Pakistan’s Space and Upper Atmosphere Research Commission (SUPARCO) to advance the country’s technological capabilities in space science.
The satellite is expected to enhance Pakistan’s ability to manage natural resources, predict and respond to floods and other disasters, support food security and drive economic growth through informed decision-making and sustainable development.
“Soaring higher and higher! Proud moment for the nation as [Pakistan] proudly launches its first indigenous Electro-Optical (EO-1) satellite from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center, China,” Sharif said in a social post on X, formerly Twitter.

Pakistan's indigenous Electro-Optical (EO-1) satellite launched from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Centre (JSLC) in northern China on January 17, 2025. (PMO)

“From predicting crop yields to tracking urban growth, #EO1 is a leap forward in our journey towards progress,” he continued, praising SUPARCO and all the scientists and engineers involved in the project for their team effort.
According to China’s state-run Xinhua news agency, the satellite was launched at 12:07 p.m. Beijing time aboard a Long March-2D carrier rocket and successfully entered its planned orbit.
The Pakistani military also applauded the development, highlighting its wide-ranging applications across various sectors.

Officials gesture for a group photograph following the launch of Pakistan's indigenous Electro-Optical (EO-1) satellite from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Centre (JSLC) in northern China on January 17, 2025. (PMO)

“In agriculture, it will enable precision farming by monitoring crops, assessing irrigation needs, predicting yields, and supporting food security initiatives,” the military media wing, the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), said in a statement, calling the development a “momentous milestone in Pakistan’s space journey.”
“For urban development planning, the satellite will assist in tracking infrastructure growth and managing urban sprawl,” it added.
Among its other roles, the EO-1 will aid in the extraction and conservation of natural resources such as minerals, oil and gas. Additionally, it will help monitor glacier recession and water resources.
Pakistan has made significant progress in its space research program. Last year, SUPARCO announced its rover would join China’s Chang’E 8 mission to explore the moon’s surface in 2028.
“This achievement positions advanced space technology capabilities at the forefront of national progress,” ISPR added in the statement after the satellite launch, emphasizing its role in furthering Pakistan’s ambitions in space exploration.