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Imran that we know.

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The Imran that we know

Shafqat Mahmood
Friday, May 25, 2012

530172_364907310218362_1131139187_n.jpg


Imran is not a stranger to us. He became a public figure at the age of twenty-four. We have seen him as a sportsman, social worker and politician. And there are some things we have come to understand about him.



The man has unimpeachable integrity, he has a propensity to set seemingly impossible goals, and he has a fierce determination to reach them.Although I love cricket and the world cup triumph ranks as a glorious moment in my cricket following life, the story that I find most illustrative of the man is about the Shaukat Khanum Hospital.



All the experts told him it couldn’t be done. Building a dedicated cancer hospital they said is virtually impossible. When he said that not only would he do it but also treat seventy percent patients free, they threw up their hands. One American expert said that the hospital would close in three months.It is still open and does treat over seventy percent patients free.



This is the essence of the man. He will reach for what seems impossible. Among other things, my friend Mohammad Malick in his column has questioned Imran’s decision to hold party elections after a massive membership campaign. His comment is that this will leave the party unprepared for the general election.



Before we go into timelines, let us look at this decision itself. No party has ever really done it before. What passes for party elections here are actually nominations through consensus or most often outright dictatorial fiat of the party leader.



Imran has decided to take the more difficult, some say impossible, route. He wants real elections at all levels in the party. The wizened political pros are not happy, the cynics are predicting party collapse, and our media friends are shaking their head, telling us to stop even at this late stage.



Real genuine party elections are not easy. The modalities themselves to say the least are daunting. We are hoping to enrol between five to ten million members. Getting all of them to the polls with limited party resources to directly elect district level party leaders is going to be some task.



But, then, this is what Imran is. Always going for the seemingly impossible. His vision is that the party can never become an institution until it establishes a culture of real elections at all levels. They may be messy and not everything will work out exactly as planned but it is a journey in the right direction.



This is the approach that guides his politics. Go in the right direction even if the obstacles seem daunting. One such objective that raises the dander up among some very good people, who in essence like Imran, is his determination to bring everyone, all schools of thought together.



In particular, they find it difficult to stomach the party sending a representative to some Difa-e-Pakistan (DPC) rallies. The rationale has been given again and again but some people still refuse to accept it. The PTI wants to engage with all schools of thought in the country. Going to these rallies does not mean endorsing their point of view. It is reflective of a process of engagement.



Actually not going of mainstream parties to their rallies is more dangerous. It would mean isolating the forty odd parties in the DPC and pushing them out of the political process into greater radicalism. Imran believes that we must engage with them, ask them to propagate their point of view within the political process, and urge them to participate in elections rather than using other means.



Let us look at this from another angle. These forty odd parties let us assume have half a million active supporters if not more in a country of one hundred and eighty million. In the general population, those subscribing to their deeply conservative point of view could be at least ten percent given the kind of curriculum taught in most madrassahs.



So, what should we do with these parties and their sizeable number of supporters in the country, if not engage with them? If we shun them and do not get them into the political process what would their reaction be?



Cajoling people into democratic participation and towards pushing their agendas politically versus isolating them and getting them to use other means to get what they want is actually a no brainer. It is just that people find it impossible to transcend their dislike for the political and social views of these parties.



While the PTI too does not agree with their views, it is ready to see the problem holistically and act in the larger national interest. And national interest is that all points of view must flow within the political stream.



Just to put this thinking in perspective, let us look at another set of people. The so-called Baloch Liberation Army and other separatist groups that have been committing horrendous acts of violence. Some of them are actually involved in ethnic cleansing.



Yet, the very same people who say that we should shun parties propagating extremist views with a religious tinge would tell you to negotiate with the BLA/other separatists and bring them into the mainstream.



Imran Khan is neither a religious ideologue nor a conservative or liberal. These categories in our context have frankly changed beyond recognition. While ‘liberals’ all over the world are against wars, violence etc, some among us who claim to be liberals want every religious fanatic or Taliban type to be bombed into oblivion.



So let us leave these categories aside. Imran Khan is a nationalist who wants to take this country forward by uniting it in a common cause to fight poverty, disease, hunger, ignorance and much more.



And just for the record since friend Malick asked, he believes in all the fundamental rights as enshrined in the Constitution and the UN Charter. He has clearly stated that state security is only possible if rule of law prevails. He has condemned any illegal and unlawful action allegedly committed by state security agencies.



He has raised his voice repeatedly against violence against women, has urged for them to get equal property rights and indeed believes in equality for women in all spheres of life. In PTI women hold prominent positions not only in the Women Wing but also in the main party.



And lastly, the party is diligently preparing the details of its agenda of change. Two aspects have been unveiled; energy and local government and others will be soon. The Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf is conscious that as the most popular party in the country according to the latest IRI survey, we have to be ready.


5-25-2012_110395_l_akb.jpg


The writer is information secretary of the PTI. Email: shafqatmd@gmail.com


The Imran that we know - Shafqat Mahmood
 
. .
Looks like paid news to me.. from the first sentence it has been praises. He has a long agenda but how he plans to achieve them is never questioned. Please ask him, before he turns out to be another Zardari.
 
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Looks like paid news to me.. from the first sentence it has been praises. He has a long agenda but how he plans to achieve them is never questioned. Please ask him, before he turns out to be another Zardari.

first its not a news, second its an opinion and for those with eyes the writer is info secretary PTI, for those who dont know what is PTI

why the fuucckk they bothered to comment?

h1_11.jpg

The Imran that we know

Shafqat Mahmood
Friday, May 25, 2012

530172_364907310218362_1131139187_n.jpg


Imran is not a stranger to us. He became a public figure at the age of twenty-four. We have seen him as a sportsman, social worker and politician. And there are some things we have come to understand about him.



The man has unimpeachable integrity, he has a propensity to set seemingly impossible goals, and he has a fierce determination to reach them.Although I love cricket and the world cup triumph ranks as a glorious moment in my cricket following life, the story that I find most illustrative of the man is about the Shaukat Khanum Hospital.



All the experts told him it couldn’t be done. Building a dedicated cancer hospital they said is virtually impossible. When he said that not only would he do it but also treat seventy percent patients free, they threw up their hands. One American expert said that the hospital would close in three months.It is still open and does treat over seventy percent patients free.



This is the essence of the man. He will reach for what seems impossible. Among other things, my friend Mohammad Malick in his column has questioned Imran’s decision to hold party elections after a massive membership campaign. His comment is that this will leave the party unprepared for the general election.



Before we go into timelines, let us look at this decision itself. No party has ever really done it before. What passes for party elections here are actually nominations through consensus or most often outright dictatorial fiat of the party leader.



Imran has decided to take the more difficult, some say impossible, route. He wants real elections at all levels in the party. The wizened political pros are not happy, the cynics are predicting party collapse, and our media friends are shaking their head, telling us to stop even at this late stage.



Real genuine party elections are not easy. The modalities themselves to say the least are daunting. We are hoping to enrol between five to ten million members. Getting all of them to the polls with limited party resources to directly elect district level party leaders is going to be some task.



But, then, this is what Imran is. Always going for the seemingly impossible. His vision is that the party can never become an institution until it establishes a culture of real elections at all levels. They may be messy and not everything will work out exactly as planned but it is a journey in the right direction.



This is the approach that guides his politics. Go in the right direction even if the obstacles seem daunting. One such objective that raises the dander up among some very good people, who in essence like Imran, is his determination to bring everyone, all schools of thought together.



In particular, they find it difficult to stomach the party sending a representative to some Difa-e-Pakistan (DPC) rallies. The rationale has been given again and again but some people still refuse to accept it. The PTI wants to engage with all schools of thought in the country. Going to these rallies does not mean endorsing their point of view. It is reflective of a process of engagement.



Actually not going of mainstream parties to their rallies is more dangerous. It would mean isolating the forty odd parties in the DPC and pushing them out of the political process into greater radicalism. Imran believes that we must engage with them, ask them to propagate their point of view within the political process, and urge them to participate in elections rather than using other means.



Let us look at this from another angle. These forty odd parties let us assume have half a million active supporters if not more in a country of one hundred and eighty million. In the general population, those subscribing to their deeply conservative point of view could be at least ten percent given the kind of curriculum taught in most madrassahs.



So, what should we do with these parties and their sizeable number of supporters in the country, if not engage with them? If we shun them and do not get them into the political process what would their reaction be?



Cajoling people into democratic participation and towards pushing their agendas politically versus isolating them and getting them to use other means to get what they want is actually a no brainer. It is just that people find it impossible to transcend their dislike for the political and social views of these parties.



While the PTI too does not agree with their views, it is ready to see the problem holistically and act in the larger national interest. And national interest is that all points of view must flow within the political stream.



Just to put this thinking in perspective, let us look at another set of people. The so-called Baloch Liberation Army and other separatist groups that have been committing horrendous acts of violence. Some of them are actually involved in ethnic cleansing.



Yet, the very same people who say that we should shun parties propagating extremist views with a religious tinge would tell you to negotiate with the BLA/other separatists and bring them into the mainstream.



Imran Khan is neither a religious ideologue nor a conservative or liberal. These categories in our context have frankly changed beyond recognition. While ‘liberals’ all over the world are against wars, violence etc, some among us who claim to be liberals want every religious fanatic or Taliban type to be bombed into oblivion.



So let us leave these categories aside. Imran Khan is a nationalist who wants to take this country forward by uniting it in a common cause to fight poverty, disease, hunger, ignorance and much more.



And just for the record since friend Malick asked, he believes in all the fundamental rights as enshrined in the Constitution and the UN Charter. He has clearly stated that state security is only possible if rule of law prevails. He has condemned any illegal and unlawful action allegedly committed by state security agencies.



He has raised his voice repeatedly against violence against women, has urged for them to get equal property rights and indeed believes in equality for women in all spheres of life. In PTI women hold prominent positions not only in the Women Wing but also in the main party.



And lastly, the party is diligently preparing the details of its agenda of change. Two aspects have been unveiled; energy and local government and others will be soon. The Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf is conscious that as the most popular party in the country according to the latest IRI survey, we have to be ready.


5-25-2012_110395_l_akb.jpg


The writer is information secretary of the PTI. Email: shafqatmd@gmail.com


The Imran that we know - Shafqat Mahmood

just imagine the things he will do for this nation/country once in power... :pakistan:

h1_11.jpg

The Imran that we know

Shafqat Mahmood
Friday, May 25, 2012

530172_364907310218362_1131139187_n.jpg


Imran is not a stranger to us. He became a public figure at the age of twenty-four. We have seen him as a sportsman, social worker and politician. And there are some things we have come to understand about him.



The man has unimpeachable integrity, he has a propensity to set seemingly impossible goals, and he has a fierce determination to reach them.Although I love cricket and the world cup triumph ranks as a glorious moment in my cricket following life, the story that I find most illustrative of the man is about the Shaukat Khanum Hospital.



All the experts told him it couldn’t be done. Building a dedicated cancer hospital they said is virtually impossible. When he said that not only would he do it but also treat seventy percent patients free, they threw up their hands. One American expert said that the hospital would close in three months.It is still open and does treat over seventy percent patients free.



This is the essence of the man. He will reach for what seems impossible. Among other things, my friend Mohammad Malick in his column has questioned Imran’s decision to hold party elections after a massive membership campaign. His comment is that this will leave the party unprepared for the general election.



Before we go into timelines, let us look at this decision itself. No party has ever really done it before. What passes for party elections here are actually nominations through consensus or most often outright dictatorial fiat of the party leader.



Imran has decided to take the more difficult, some say impossible, route. He wants real elections at all levels in the party. The wizened political pros are not happy, the cynics are predicting party collapse, and our media friends are shaking their head, telling us to stop even at this late stage.



Real genuine party elections are not easy. The modalities themselves to say the least are daunting. We are hoping to enrol between five to ten million members. Getting all of them to the polls with limited party resources to directly elect district level party leaders is going to be some task.



But, then, this is what Imran is. Always going for the seemingly impossible. His vision is that the party can never become an institution until it establishes a culture of real elections at all levels. They may be messy and not everything will work out exactly as planned but it is a journey in the right direction.



This is the approach that guides his politics. Go in the right direction even if the obstacles seem daunting. One such objective that raises the dander up among some very good people, who in essence like Imran, is his determination to bring everyone, all schools of thought together.



In particular, they find it difficult to stomach the party sending a representative to some Difa-e-Pakistan (DPC) rallies. The rationale has been given again and again but some people still refuse to accept it. The PTI wants to engage with all schools of thought in the country. Going to these rallies does not mean endorsing their point of view. It is reflective of a process of engagement.



Actually not going of mainstream parties to their rallies is more dangerous. It would mean isolating the forty odd parties in the DPC and pushing them out of the political process into greater radicalism. Imran believes that we must engage with them, ask them to propagate their point of view within the political process, and urge them to participate in elections rather than using other means.



Let us look at this from another angle. These forty odd parties let us assume have half a million active supporters if not more in a country of one hundred and eighty million. In the general population, those subscribing to their deeply conservative point of view could be at least ten percent given the kind of curriculum taught in most madrassahs.



So, what should we do with these parties and their sizeable number of supporters in the country, if not engage with them? If we shun them and do not get them into the political process what would their reaction be?



Cajoling people into democratic participation and towards pushing their agendas politically versus isolating them and getting them to use other means to get what they want is actually a no brainer. It is just that people find it impossible to transcend their dislike for the political and social views of these parties.



While the PTI too does not agree with their views, it is ready to see the problem holistically and act in the larger national interest. And national interest is that all points of view must flow within the political stream.



Just to put this thinking in perspective, let us look at another set of people. The so-called Baloch Liberation Army and other separatist groups that have been committing horrendous acts of violence. Some of them are actually involved in ethnic cleansing.



Yet, the very same people who say that we should shun parties propagating extremist views with a religious tinge would tell you to negotiate with the BLA/other separatists and bring them into the mainstream.



Imran Khan is neither a religious ideologue nor a conservative or liberal. These categories in our context have frankly changed beyond recognition. While ‘liberals’ all over the world are against wars, violence etc, some among us who claim to be liberals want every religious fanatic or Taliban type to be bombed into oblivion.



So let us leave these categories aside. Imran Khan is a nationalist who wants to take this country forward by uniting it in a common cause to fight poverty, disease, hunger, ignorance and much more.



And just for the record since friend Malick asked, he believes in all the fundamental rights as enshrined in the Constitution and the UN Charter. He has clearly stated that state security is only possible if rule of law prevails. He has condemned any illegal and unlawful action allegedly committed by state security agencies.



He has raised his voice repeatedly against violence against women, has urged for them to get equal property rights and indeed believes in equality for women in all spheres of life. In PTI women hold prominent positions not only in the Women Wing but also in the main party.



And lastly, the party is diligently preparing the details of its agenda of change. Two aspects have been unveiled; energy and local government and others will be soon. The Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf is conscious that as the most popular party in the country according to the latest IRI survey, we have to be ready.


5-25-2012_110395_l_akb.jpg


The writer is information secretary of the PTI. Email: shafqatmd@gmail.com


The Imran that we know - Shafqat Mahmood

just imagine the things he will do for this nation/country once in power... :pakistan:
 
. .
I think this would be the ultimate game changer, setting Imran Khan wayyyyy apart from the Likes of Zardari and Nawaz Sharif.

There is going to be a mini election within Pakistan by the Memberbase of PTI, they will get mobilized and things will begin to happen moreover good candidates from all parties would sit and watch in awe at how they only wished their own party conducted themselves.

Hassan Nissar said that the more time you give Imran Khan before the elections the more stronger he would get. If they had conducted the elections sometime around jan/feb PTI wouldn't have found this power that it wields today and tomorrow its just going to get stronger since PTI had some issues in Jan with Marvi Memon double crossing them and the Shireen Mazari episode. This gave Imran some time to go back to the basics and rebuild from there.
 
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I am a firm supporter of giving Imran Khan a chance to put the country on a right track. The reason is that everything that he tried to do was successful and with his track record , he is the most promising candidate. Nawaz Sharif and Zardari are too corrupt to be trusted.
 
. . .
Hassan Nissar said that the more time you give Imran Khan before the elections the more stronger he would get. If they had conducted the elections sometime around jan/feb PTI wouldn't have found this power that it wields today and tomorrow its just going to get stronger since PTI had some issues in Jan with Marvi Memon double crossing them and the Shireen Mazari episode. This gave Imran some time to go back to the basics and rebuild from there.

Sir, I beg your pardon; Hansan Nisar only playing politics, the best time of election as far as PTI is concerned was always around Jan/Feb 2012 bcz…

• The blitz formed by 30th October Lahore Jalsa was fresh and people were in shock by PTI offensiveness compares to PMLNs friendly opposition tag. But since Gillani’s contempt of court verdict, this equation almost turned around, which will hurt PTI for the same reasons she was progressed earlier.

• Defections toward PTI almost stopped now as well as electablse as well as established parties overcome that PTI blitz somehow but if elections held at Jan/Feb the situation would be totally different.

• In an “establishment set up” by a forcefull Zardari exit, PTI could wield more power through supportive bureaucracy. While, now in an interim set up, created under constitution and parliament where PTI has no representation, it will be hard to win on the same reasons nonetheless. Further, this is the basic reasons PTI still demands PMLNs resignations in order to to thwart the system to run it complete course as it is.

• Marvi Memon joins PMLN only on 5th March, if election held at Jan/Feb she would definitely be part of PTI due to supportive reasons all around. Secondly, the blitz and space now created by her in Sindh for PMLN will turnout another weak point for PTI in elections to come.

Ground realities only forsees a receding tsunami as of now, unless Imran could muster another same kind of blitz somehow....this will ramins the fate of it till elections.
 
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No leader can do anything in Pakistan.

The public is the source of blame for bringing whatever that came to power to create corruption and to do loot mar...
Our people must bring change in them first!
 
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Looks like paid news to me.. from the first sentence it has been praises. He has a long agenda but how he plans to achieve them is never questioned. Please ask him, before he turns out to be another Zardari.

zardari never had an agenda for countrys economy...he only played victim to get sympathy votes and our emotional people fell for it..
IK has a plan and an agenda and he is takinv in educated people amd specialists of different fields to run the projects when he comes to power.
 
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zardari never had an agenda for countrys economy...he only played victim to get sympathy votes and our emotional people fell for it..
IK has a plan and an agenda and he is takinv in educated people amd specialists of different fields to run the projects when he comes to power.
Hope what you say is true, however asking how he plans to do those things is your right and duty..
 
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Wait a min if i'm not wrong the same Shafqat wrote article against IK few years back....
Sorry but i wont read & give any importance to an article written in favor of any political leader by his party's information secretary..
 
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A few interesting old pictures of Imran Khan I found on the internet.

403595_10150509947462600_2116253565_n.jpg

Imran Khan as a child with his family



426075_10150561309252600_181941807599_9022600_1693882783_n.jpg

Imran Khan with General Zia Ul Haq in 1987



550638_466968666661938_198199843538823_1793050_632545428_n.jpg

Imran Khan with Moin Akhtar and indian actor.



539859_417073294984809_198199843538823_1648045_878623269_n.jpg

Pakistan Cricket Team celebrating their victory in 1992 World Cup



large-Imran-Khan-Shahzaman-Zaid-Hamid-and-Lt-Gen-Hamid-Gul-not-visible-not-verified-in-an-undated-picture.jpg

Imran Khan with Zaid Hamid
 
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