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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Saturday, August 11, 2018
Pakistan: Can Khan deliver?

As Pakistan’s PM, Imran Khan must embrace compromise. Can he deliver on his promises?
( August 6, 2018, Canberra, Sri Lanka Guardian) Once a global cricket star, Imran Khan is now poised to
become Pakistan’s new prime minister. But he’s likely to find that
running a country is much more difficult than winning the vote; the July
election that brought him to power has also left his party short of a
clear parliamentary majority.
Forced to form a coalition in parliament, Khan will have to compromise
if he’s to have any hope of tackling key issues in Pakistan – myriad
economic, environmental, foreign policy and social welfare challenges –
while trying to deliver on his vision for “naya Pakistan” (new Pakistan).
Rise to power
Khan formed his political party, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI), in 1996
and persevered for years to muster support for his vision for “naya
Pakistan”. His electoral success is also partly explained by his
popularity as the cricket captain who won the World Cup for Pakistan in 1992.
In a country that feverishly loves cricket, Khan creatively used
“cricket-speak” in his campaigning and employed a cricket bat as his
electoral symbol. But his success has predominantly resulted from
pre-polling orchestration and support from the military, which provided
him space for electioneering while denying similar opportunities for
other contestants. In other words, he has learnt the art of politics.
Khan’s chief rival was the Pakistan Muslim League (PML-N), led by former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, whose administration was toppled over
corruption allegations. When the nation’s top court declared him
ineligible to hold public office – a move Sharif decried as “judicial martial law” – his party was left weakened. Khan’s party, the PTI, reaped the benefits.
Following the July vote, the PTI secured 116 of the 270 seats contested
in the National Assembly, with rival parties PML-N and Pakistan Peoples
Party (PPP) securing only 64 and 43 seats, respectively.
Falling short of a clear majority, Khan’s PTI party has opted for
coalition politics. It has joined forces with independently elected
representatives and a wide variety of political parties, including the
Grand Democratic Alliance (GDA), the Muttahida Quami Movement (MQM) and
the Balochistan Awami Party (BAP).
The coalition is also poised to form three of the four provincial
governments: Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KPK), Balochistan and Punjab. Of these,
Punjab is the jewel in the crown, with half of the country’s 208
million people, and where the PML-N has lost its traditional power base
to the PTI. But ensuring the sustainability of coalition government at
provincial level remains a challenge, especially as local tensions intersect with the eternal strain between central and regional governments.
Foriegn policy woes and domestic tensions
In the foreign policy arena, Pakistan faces mounting US pressure and has been placed on
the “grey list” of the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), an
inter-governmental body aimed at combating money laundering and
terrorist financing.
The military has increasingly sought to control Pakistan’s foreign
policy, especially its relationships with India, Afghanistan, the US,
Iran and the Gulf States. We shouldn’t expect huge change on that front.
Judging by the PTI manifesto and Khan’s first post-election address, the new government will continue to operate within the parameters established by the military.
Khan’s PTI party faces domestic economic woes, too. Pakistan’s foreign
exchange reserves have dwindled from US$17.5 billion in April to US$9.66
billion in June. Economic growth has slowed, the rupee has been
devalued and Pakistan is seeking a US$12 billion bailout package from the International Monetary Fund.
Can Khan deliver?
Khan acknowledges these challenges, and has proffered solutions. He’s talked about learning from China the art of rapidly lifting people out of poverty and promised to cut government spending.
But the capacity of the government to deliver on these promises cannot
be guaranteed. Traditionally, Pakistan’s regional and national leaders
have used their local influence to sustain their respective power bases
at the cost of ordinary citizens. Khan’s PTI party has engaged a
number of these “electables” for its electoral success, but such people
are unlikely to embrace change beyond a certain level.
The biggest challenge remains the tide of rising expectations in
Pakistan. Khan says his vision of “naya Pakistan” means combating
corruption and nepotism, promoting merit-based decisions at all levels,
increasing accountability and boosting access to education and health
services.
Such aspirations are noble, but he will need more than five years to
achieve all this in a country in which the powerful are privileged and
the powerless usually ignored.
This is not to suggest that nothing can or will change in Pakistan.
But change may be so slow that young people (who make up 64% of the population) could grow increasingly disillusioned.
Pakistan’s political history may repeat itself. Former prime minister Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto (who
was also the father of another Pakistani leader, Benazir Bhutto)
similarly heightened expectations among the poor in the 1960s with a
suite of promises. His inability to deliver on them pushed the country
towards 11 years of military rule.
The growing power of Pakistan’s religious groups is an even bigger
challenge. Traditional Islamist parties have not fared well in the
elections. But one such party, Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP),
secured 2.2 million votes, in contrast to the 6.8 million votes for the
left-leaning Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP), led by Benazir Bhutto’s son Bilawal.
If PTI fails to deliver on Khan’s promise of a “new Pakistan”, the TLP
or other militant outfits could entice more young people to join their
cause.
Samina Yasmeen, Director of Centre for Muslim States and Societies, University of Western Australia
This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

