-Caveat Lector-

>From http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,3-443922,00.html

>>>Nifty graphic @ site<<<

World News

October 12, 2002

Islam gains power in Pakistan election
>From Zahid Hussain in Islamabad

ISLAMIC fundamentalists look set to hold the balance of power in the formation of a new
Pakistan government after their astonishing success in Thursday’s elections.

The advance of the alliance of five hardline Islamic parties is bound to call into 
question the
continuation of Pakistani and American efforts to hunt down Taleban and al-Qaeda 
fugitives
in the rugged north near the Afghan border.

With two thirds of the votes counted, no political party had won a clear majority in 
the polls,
laying the groundwork for frenetic horsetrading to create a viable coalition. The 
Pakistan
Muslim League (Quaid-i-Azam) (PML-Q), which supports the military rule of President
Musharraf, appeared to be on course to win the largest number of seats, followed in
second place by Benazir Bhutto’s Pakistan People’s Party (PPP).

But the biggest upset was the emergence of the pro- Taleban Muthida Majlis-i-Amal (MMA)
alliance in third place, putting it on course to become the kingmaker in the formation 
of any
coalition government. The alliance swept the vote in North West Frontier Province and
Baluchistan, the eastern provinces bordering Afghanistan, and also won control of local
assemblies there.

“It is a revolution,” Qazi Hussain Ahmed, the alliance’s deputy leader, told 
supporters at a
victory rally. “We will not accept US bases and Western culture.”

The alliance’s success will come as a rude shock to General Musharraf’s regime, which 
had
cultivated it during the campaign but never expected it to emerge in such a powerful
position. The Government-backed PML-Q will now have little choice but to invite at 
least
some of the alliance’s religious parties into government if it is to exclude PPP 
rivals from
power.

That may mean significant concessions to the fundamentalists, who campaigned on an 
anti-
American platform and called for the removal of US troops from Pakistani
territory.Diplomats said they did not believe that the fundamentalists would prove a 
serious
hurdle to Pakistan’s pro-American foreign policy, but acknowledged that the reality 
could be
different.

“The question is, will it now be easy for American troops to wander round tribal 
areas?”
one Western diplomat said. “In the long run, however, Pakistan has no real alternative 
to
supporting the Americans and there is a limit to how much the religious parties can 
upset
that.”

The alliance leaders said that the election results were a clear repudiation of General
Musharraf’s policy of supporting the United States. The general’s liberal policies 
have also
evoked strong opposition from the radical Islamic groups.

But the real danger may lie within the ranks of the Armed Forces. Observers believe 
that
conservative officers will be emboldened by the gains of the fundamentalists. Far from 
a
return to democratic rule, most see the election as ushering in a new form of military
government.

“The religious right has alway thrived under military rule,” Samina Ahmed, of the
International Crisis Group, said.

Widespread voter apathy and the fact that the former Prime Ministers Benazir Bhutto and
Nawaz Sharif were excluded from the polls appeared to have played into the hands of the
fundamentalists, who they failed to win more than 5 per cent in previous elections.

They were also aided by the Government, which allowed them more freedom to campaign
than other political parties, banking on being able to use their support in a later 
parliament.

The parties that fared less well than expected were quick to call foul, pointing to 
long
delays in the announcement of the results after first returns showed a slender lead 
for Miss
Bhutto’s PPP. Miss Bhutto complained that the results being declared throughout 
yesterday
contradicted exit polls that showed her party winning a narrow majority.

Independent candidates also fared well in an election marked by a popular weariness 
with
the old political order. Imran Khan, the former cricket captain turned politician, won 
a seat
in Parliament for the first time, defeating a government-backed candidate.


Contact our advertising team for advertising and sponsorship in Times Online, The Times
and The Sunday Times.

Copyright 2002 Times Newspapers Ltd.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
A<>E<>R
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important)
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shut."
--- Ernest Hemingway

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