No impact of Altaf Hussain’s acquittal on local politics — experts

Altaf Hussain, center, exiled founder of Pakistan's Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) party, is helped off a car outside the Kingston Crown Court in Kingston upon Thames, London, on January 31, 2022. (AFP)
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Updated 16 February 2022
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No impact of Altaf Hussain’s acquittal on local politics — experts

  • British police in 2019 charged Hussain with terrorism offense in connection with speech delivered in 2016
  • Analysts describe the decision as a ‘setback’ for those who disowned the MQM founder after he charged for inciting violence in Karachi

KARACHI: The Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) should be allowed to operate in Pakistan once again, said one of its senior office bearers on Wednesday, after the party’s founding leader Altaf Hussain was found not guilty of encouraging acts of terrorism through his speeches to his followers in Karachi.

British police said in 2019 they had charged the London-based leader with a terrorism offense in connection with a speech delivered three years ago in which he was accused of urging a crowd of hunger strikers in Karachi to ransack media houses and storm the local headquarters of a military unit.

Two TV studios were soon after attacked and taken off air, while police officers were assaulted and injured. One person was killed in the violence.

“The Pakistani establishment should realize its mistake after this verdict, remove the ban [on MQM], open Nine-Zero [the party’s headquarter in Karachi], and allow our party to function which is our democratic right,” Mustafa Azizabadi, a senior MQM leader, told Arab News. “The judgement is enough to prove that Altaf Hussain was innocent and he was implicated in a false case.”

“The London court’s jury examined every fact, listened to the prosecution and found that the allegations against Hussain were baseless,” he continued. “The parties and factions created before and after the speech miserably failed to inspire confidence among people who have always supported the MQM founder.”

Amir Khan, a leader of the MQM-Pakistan, a faction created after Hussain’s controversial August 2016 speech, did not respond to repeated requests for a comment.

A senior Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) leader Shehla Raza said the decision of London jury would not have much of an impact on Karachi, a city which was once remotely ruled by Hussain from self-exile.

“It can only leave an impact if Hussain returns to Karachi which he never will,” she told Arab News. “We believe the international jury's decision is made to disturb Pakistan’s peace.”

Speaking to the media, Governor Sindh Imran Ismail of the ruling Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party, dismissed the notion that some “backdoor diplomacy” had taken place to exonerate the MQM founder in London.

“No talks can be held with a person who has been raising slogans against Pakistan, who has been seeking to break the country, and who has been against the very existence of Pakistan,” he said. “Hussain has no role here anymore.”

However, a ruling party’s National Assembly member from Karachi, Aamir Liaquat Hussain, welcomed the development in a series of Twitter posts.

“I congratulate Altaf Bhai [brother] on his acquittal from the bottom of my heart,” he said.

Owais Tohid, a political analyst, agreed that the decision would not revive Hussain’s politics in Karachi, though he maintained it was a setback for people who disowned him.

“With the recent decision by a London court to acquit Altaf Hussain from terrorism charges, the ghost will continue to haunt those who disassociated themselves from him after his controversial speech,” he told Arab News. “The decision will give a boost to dedicated MQM workers and their association with Altaf Hussain will further solidify.”

Tohid said “the security apparatus” would not allow the MQM to revive its old structure.

“The party’s mass support has obviously shattered during last few years and its control through force will not be allowed anymore,” he added.


Pakistan PM orders action against fuel hoarding amid Iran conflict supply fears

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Pakistan PM orders action against fuel hoarding amid Iran conflict supply fears

  • Sharif asks authorities to shut down petrol pumps involved in any attempt to create artificial shortages
  • Government says it holds adequate fuel stocks despite shipping risks as Strait of Hormuz tensions rise

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Friday ordered authorities to take strict action against fuel hoarders and shut down petrol pumps involved in any attempt to create artificial shortages, as anxiety grows over potential supply disruptions from the widening conflict involving Iran.

Sharif issued the directive during a high-level meeting on petroleum supplies, where officials briefed him that Pakistan currently holds sufficient fuel reserves to meet domestic demand despite the volatile regional situation.

The move comes as Pakistan steps up contingency measures following fears of supply disruptions linked to the escalating conflict involving Iran, the United States and Israel.

The concerns stem partly from disruptions in tanker traffic after the Strait of Hormuz — a key global oil chokepoint between Iran and Oman through which much of Pakistan’s imported crude typically transits — was shut following rising hostilities in the Gulf.

“The prime minister directed provincial governments to take strict legal action against hoarders of petroleum products,” Sharif’s office said in a statement after the meeting.

“Any petrol pump involved in the reprehensible practice of creating artificial shortages should be immediately shut down, its license revoked and legal action initiated,” it added.

Earlier this week, Pakistan’s Oil and Gas Regulatory Authority (OGRA) allowed oil marketing companies to temporarily regulate supplies to retail outlets to discourage hoarding and maintain stability in fuel distribution.

Sharif instructed the petroleum minister to visit provinces and coordinate with their administrations to develop a strategy for conserving petroleum products and ensuring their uninterrupted supply to the public.

The prime minister further ordered the creation of a digital dashboard to monitor the movement of petroleum products and share real-time data with provincial authorities to improve oversight of fuel transportation and distribution.