Pksecurity
FULL MEMBER
- Joined
- Sep 21, 2011
- Messages
- 306
- Reaction score
- 1
- Country
- Location
Pakistan’s Karachi-based ethnic party, Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) has proved yet again that it can paralyze Karachi, Pakistan’s largest port city and business hub. It had asked Karachiites to shut down the city and suspend all business activities on Friday to mourn the death of its activists. This has become a routine that whenever MQM is out of power, it flexes its muscles and either shuts down the city for the whole day or go on rampage leading to increase in the incidents of target killing.
The “Day of Mourning” for Friday was observed to protest against the death of its activist, Muhammad Asif who went missing nearly two months ago and whose dead body was in Landhi area of Karachi on Thursday. The party had earlier called for a day of mourning on June 6, 2013 after three of its workers were kidnapped and killed by unidentified men.
MQM is believed to the largest political party of Karachi having militant wing. It is capable to order killing of any person in Karachi on the orders of its leader who remote-controls the party from London. Its assassinations are coordinated from an unnamed location in South Africa. The targets range from estranged leaders and workers to the journalists who have access to sensitive information of party’s ring of assassination. The media is so scared of the party that it either does not highlight the criminal activities of the party or only attributes the crimes to “unknown” elements.
MQM has been a coalition partner of nearly every government who is forced to take it into its fold to keep Karachi peaceful. Shutting down the city of the call of the party for a single day translates into a loss of tens of billions to the economy.
The government of PML (N) had sacked the party’s ministers in 1998 when there was an evidence that a high-respected social figure and philanthropist, Hakim Saeed, was killed by MQM’s assassins for his refusal to pay up extortion money to the party. The people of Karachi are expecting the present government will move against the deadly assassins a la 1998 by sacking the provincial government for failing to maintain law and order and appoint a governor to directly rule the province.
The continued killing spree and intermittent strike calls to paralyze the city have raised serious questions about the capacity of the provincial government of Zardari’s PPP who was a major ally of MQM during the last five years. If the city does not come back to the fold of law, the government of Nawaz Sharif will have to take difficult decisions about MQM and Karachi.
Another day of mourning in Karachi leaves behind serious questions
The “Day of Mourning” for Friday was observed to protest against the death of its activist, Muhammad Asif who went missing nearly two months ago and whose dead body was in Landhi area of Karachi on Thursday. The party had earlier called for a day of mourning on June 6, 2013 after three of its workers were kidnapped and killed by unidentified men.
MQM is believed to the largest political party of Karachi having militant wing. It is capable to order killing of any person in Karachi on the orders of its leader who remote-controls the party from London. Its assassinations are coordinated from an unnamed location in South Africa. The targets range from estranged leaders and workers to the journalists who have access to sensitive information of party’s ring of assassination. The media is so scared of the party that it either does not highlight the criminal activities of the party or only attributes the crimes to “unknown” elements.
MQM has been a coalition partner of nearly every government who is forced to take it into its fold to keep Karachi peaceful. Shutting down the city of the call of the party for a single day translates into a loss of tens of billions to the economy.
The government of PML (N) had sacked the party’s ministers in 1998 when there was an evidence that a high-respected social figure and philanthropist, Hakim Saeed, was killed by MQM’s assassins for his refusal to pay up extortion money to the party. The people of Karachi are expecting the present government will move against the deadly assassins a la 1998 by sacking the provincial government for failing to maintain law and order and appoint a governor to directly rule the province.
The continued killing spree and intermittent strike calls to paralyze the city have raised serious questions about the capacity of the provincial government of Zardari’s PPP who was a major ally of MQM during the last five years. If the city does not come back to the fold of law, the government of Nawaz Sharif will have to take difficult decisions about MQM and Karachi.
Another day of mourning in Karachi leaves behind serious questions