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Can MQM factions put ‘bad blood’ behind them?

What is wrong with these people! They are scraping the bottom of the barrel with a bathysphere by bringing back MQM!
To bring MQM back, at this juncture is suicide! Why is the establishment acting like spoiled brats! For the love of God! please let this country survive and progress! Very demoralizing situation in the country! InshAllah this ploy will also fail like all their others! And Allah is the best of planners! Ya Rabb Madad!
 
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The last arenas of the establishment's political nexus are now left to Karachi and Balochistan, that is because the MQM, which was broken by their own hands, is being joined and built by them.
Balochistan Awami Party members are being split up and spare to other parties.
A thief goes by stealth, not manipulation


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PTI seeks action against Sindh governor for 'acting as MQM head'​

PTI MPA writes to President Alvi, terms Governor's actions 'political maneuvering' ahead of Karachi LG polls

News Desk
January 02, 2023


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Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) parliamentary leader Khurram Sher Zaman has written a letter to President Arif Alvi against Sindh Governor Kamran Tessori over his efforts to unify various MQM factions.

In the letter shared on his Twitter handle, the PTI MPA accused the Sindh governor, who belongs to MQM-Pakistan, of abusing his official position to conduct "partisan politics on behalf of the MQM, as if he is the party’s head".
 
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The MQM under its founder Altaf Hussain had dominated the scene in urban Sindh. After a ban on his political activities, the MQM-P broke into several factions losing its vote bank in Karachi to the PTI. Sindh Governor Kamran Tessori is now said to have been assigned the task of bringing the different MQM groups together under the banner of MQM-P.

He has been holding meetings with Dr Farooq Sattar, Mustafa Kamal and some others. It may not be easy though to resolve the leadership question. Even if it is settled, no one in a reincarnated MQM would have the ability to win back the lost vote bank.

Sadly, thanks to the games the establishment has been playing with power politics, Pakistan is always passing through a ‘critical phase’. At present, political uncertainly, arguably the result of such a move, has sent the economy into a tailspin.

Yet no lesson seems to have been learnt from past experiences. Artificial alliances are once again being cobbled together and compliant individuals inducted in other major parties to leave the now out-of-favour PTI in the cold.

One wonders what it will take to put a stop to contrived constructs. The country badly needs political stability which can come only when the people have the freedom to exercise their constitutional right to decide who should represent them in the provinces and at the Centre.
 

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