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Jamshed Dasti : a Profile

sparklingway

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You are disgusted by Dasti, aren't you? But in his constituency he is known as "15" as in Rescue 15 for paying a heed to the problems of his constituents immediately. I'm not defending this swine, but fact is that a society based entirely on patron-client relations creates a political environment based on patronage as well. Dasti answers the calls of his constituents, they elect him. Simple as that.

Upstarts Chip Away at Power of Feudal Pakistani Landlords
By SABRINA TAVERNISE
Published: August 28, 2010

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Jamshed Dasti, a lawmaker, drives a bus he donated to provide free transportation for his constituents in Muzzafargarh, Pakistan.


MUZAFFARGARH, Pakistan — In Pakistan, where politics has long been a matter of pedigree, Jamshed Dasti is a mongrel. The scrappy son of an amateur wrestler, Mr. Dasti has clawed his way into Pakistan’s Parliament, beating the wealthy, landed families who have ruled here.

In elite circles, Mr. Dasti is reviled as a thug, a small-time hustler with a fake college degree who represents the worst of Pakistan today. But here, he is hailed as a hero, living proof that in Pakistan, a poor man can get a seat at the rich men’s table.

Mr. Dasti’s rise is part of a broad shift in political power in Pakistan. For generations, politics took place in the parlors of a handful of rich families, a Westernized elite that owned large tracts of land and sometimes even the people who worked it. But Pakistan is urbanizing fast, and powerful forces of change are chipping away at the landed aristocracy, known in Pakistan as the feudal class.

The result is a changing political landscape more representative of Pakistani society, but far less predictable for the United States. Mr. Dasti, 32, speaks no English. His legislative record includes opposition to a sexual harassment bill. He has 35 criminal cases to his name and is from the country’s conservative heartland, where dislike of America runs deep.

How this plays out is crucial to Pakistan’s future. The country’s fast-expanding, flood-weary population needs local government as never before, but with political power shifting and institutions stillborn, the state has never been less able to provide it.

“You have scarcity arising everywhere,” said Ali Cheema, chairman of the economics department at the Lahore University of Management and Science. “Scarcity creates conflict. Conflict needs mediation. But the state is unable to do it.”

In Mr. Dasti’s area, one of the hardest hit by the recent flooding, the state has all but disappeared. Not that it was ever very present. In the British colonial era, before Pakistan became a separate country, the state would show up a few times a month in the form of a representative from the Raj dispensing justice.

Later, the local landowner took over. For years, feudal lords reigned supreme, serving as the police, the judge and the political leader. Plantations had jails, and political seats were practically owned by families.

Instead of midwifing democracy, these aristocrats obstructed it, ignoring the needs of rural Pakistanis, half of whom are still landless and desperately poor more than 60 years after Pakistan became a state.

But changes began to erode the aristocrats’ power. Cities sprouted, with jobs in construction and industry. Large-scale farms eclipsed old-fashioned plantations. Vast hereditary lands splintered among generations of sons, and many aristocratic families left the country for cities, living beyond their means off sales of their remaining lands. Mobile labor has also reduced dependence on aristocratic families.

In Punjab, the country’s most populous province, and its most economically advanced, the number of national lawmakers from feudal families shrank to 25 percent in 2008 from 42 percent in 1970, according to a count conducted by Mubashir Hassan, a former finance minister, and The New York Times.

“Feudals are a dying breed,” said S. Akbar Zaidi, a Karachi-based fellow with the Carnegie Foundation. “They have no power outside the walls of their castles.”

Mr. Dasti, a young, impulsive man with a troubled past, is much like the new Pakistan he represents. He is one of seven siblings born to illiterate parents. Despite his claims of finishing college, he never earned a degree, something his political opponents used against him in court this spring. One of the 35 criminal cases against him is for murder, a charge he said was leveled by his political opponents. Detractors accuse him of blackmailing rich people in a job at a newspaper. He said he was writing exposés.

“I have more enemies than numbers of hairs in my head,” he said, bouncing down a road in a borrowed truck. “They don’t like my style, and I don’t like theirs.”

Whatever the case, he is deeply appealing to Pakistanis, who have chosen him over feudal lords for political seats several times. Local residents call him Rescue One-Five, a reference to an emergency hot line number and his feverish work habits. Constituents clutching dirty plastic bags of documents flock to his small office for help, and he scribbles out notes for them on his Parliament letterhead like a doctor in a field hospital.

“The new faces have to work much harder because their survival depends on it,” said Sohail Warraich, chief political correspondent for Geo TV. “If they lose an election, they’re finished.”

He wields his lower-class background like a weapon, exhorting local residents to oppose the rich elite and the mafias of landlords, bureaucrats and other petty power brokers who support them.

“This was not an election,” he shouted at a sweaty crowd, referring to a race he won against an aristocrat in May. “This was a fight between the poor and the rich, between the public and the powerful classes.”

Graffiti nearby said: “Give us electricity and we’ll give you a vote.”

Lineage alone is no longer a winning strategy. Ahmed Mehmoud, an aristocrat in South Punjab, lost both Parliament seats he contested in 2008 and had to settle for a provincial assembly seat.

“The seats are no longer so safe,” said Nusrat Javed, a journalist who is an expert on politics in Punjab. “You can’t survive as a mere feudal anymore.”

Mr. Mehmoud, 48, is a wealthy man of leisure, who spends more time relaxing in his house — a pink replica of a Rajasthani palace with a hand-carved facade — than on his job as a lawmaker. Sometimes he talks to his constituents, but more often he watches them go by from the window of his speedy, white Hummer.

For years, people voted for him anyway, partly out of habit. His ancestors were considered to be distant relatives of the Prophet Muhammad, which inspires awe and respect. But more important, his constituents were tied to him economically. His family owned the land they worked and often their houses. His carpet has a worn patch where generations of peasants sat in supplication.

But now, said Shama Andleep, a local voter: “On election day, people are asking questions. People are calculating: how much has he done for us?”

Private television stations, which exploded onto the scene eight years ago, have also had an effect. Khusro Bakhtyar, a landowner in the area, said the women who were baking bread in his house were so affected by the coverage of the 2007 death of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto that they voted for her party, not his.

The changes have steered Pakistan into uncharted territory, and the effect for the United States is unclear. Unlike Mr. Mehmoud, who is unabashedly pro-American, newcomers like Mr. Dasti are more skeptical. Mr. Dasti opposes the American drone program that is used to attack militants in Pakistan, but he is not as virulently anti-American as many in his country.

The changes also leave room for Islamists. In the neighboring district of Dera Ghazi Khan, a hard-line mullah, Hafiz Abdul Karim, came within a few thousand votes in 2008 of unseating Farooq Leghari, a former president of Pakistan. His weapon? Efficient, Islamist campaign workers and free water pumps.

So far, Islamists have not tapped popular frustration in a systematic way at the ballot box, and the military, the country’s oldest, strongest institution, would probably put down any broader uprising, analysts say.

But the floods and the misery they have brought have raised the stakes.

“If you don’t give the common man justice, there will be more terrorism and even bloody revolution,” Mr. Dasti said. “This is the need of the hour.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/29/world/asia/29feudal.html?_r=1
 
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Wow NYTIMEs trying to portray corrupted politician whose disagree was fake *caught red handed* as a good politician.I think NYTIMES is Washington Propaganda tool for Administration/Pentagon/Langley.
 
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Wow NYTIMEs trying to portray corrupted politician whose disagree was fake *caught red handed* as a good politician.I think NYTIMES is Washington Propaganda tool for Administration/Pentagon/Langley.

Sometimes lame duck is better than a turkey !
 
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If he pockets 100 and spends only 10 on his poor people then he is not a saint.
 
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If a man of caliber is denied oppertunity due to not having degree ... then he is justified in presenting a fake degree...!!!

He is NOT to be blamed for presenting fake degree.

Society/System is to be blamed for denying oppertunities to a man of caliber...!!!
 
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Pakistan's floodridden lands are crying out for political change – but can Jamshed Dasti bring it?

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Jamshed Dasti, controversial 30-year-old upstart, says he will end feudalism, but others say he's just an opportunist. In the second of a four-part series, Declan Walsh meets him

Jamshed Dasti, a controversial Pakistani politician Jamshed Dasti claims to be working for the poor of Muzaffargarh in Pakistan, but others call him an opportunist. Photograph: Declan Walsh for the Guardian

As Jamshed Dasti, a brash young Pakistani politician, drives through the flood-devastated farmlands of southern Punjab, a crowd swarms around his gleaming black Jeep. Desperate faces press against the glass, begging for help. Dasti leaps out.

It is chaotic. A blind woman assails him, touching his face and shouting her troubles. A mother drags him into a tent to see her sick son, who has no medicine. A turbaned old man yells abuse about the local landlord. An argument erupts. "You're just a beggar!" one man yells at his neighbour. Dasti intervenes to make peace.

Otherwise, though, he works the crowd like a veteran – squeezing countless hands, listening to complaints, making promises, slipping 1,000 rupee (£7.50) notes into palms. Then he steps back into the car and leans out of the door. "I am here to bring change," he shouts above the din. The people burst into applause.

Muzaffargarh in southern Punjab is Pakistan's farming heartland, a fertile belt along the river Indus that produces a cornucopia of crops – wheat, rice and cotton, Pakistan's main cash export. Now it is in crisis. Since floods devastated the area last month, the riverine economy has been decimated.

The floods inundated rice fields just as they were to be harvested. In many places the cotton picking season, due to start this month, has been cancelled. Weddings, which normally follow the cotton harvest, are also off. "Nobody has the money to get married. Or the houses," says one man.

Dasti, a controversial 30-year-old political upstart, says this broken land is ready for political change. Muzaffargarh is dominated by several large landowning families, known as "feudals" in Pakistan. At the height of the floods, Dasti says, some feudals used their influence to divert the floodwaters away from selected lands, thereby inundating the poor. "They only care for themselves," he says.

It is a politically resonant charge that, in the aftermath of Pakistan's worst floods in decades, could cause the poor to reject their rural overlords, Dasti believes. "The feudals have enslaved the people for generations," he says. "I am here to set them free."

It is not likely to be so simple. Such accusations, which have also been made in Sindh, remain unproven and are mired in local rivalries. "Dasti is just an opportunist, an accidental politician. He only pretends to be poor," says Ahmed Yar Hanjra, one of the feudals targeted by Dasti's accusations.

Many feudals lost their land, even their houses, to the swollen Indus waters. A judicial commission has been established to investigate the claims; a high court judge is due to start collecting evidence in Muzaffargarh tomorrow.

What is certain, though, is that Dasti's rhetoric is tapping into a powerful sense of disillusionment among hard-hit farming families. Not far from Hanjra's house lies Chah Muslim Wallah, a 40-house village swamped by an overflowing irrigation canal. It now resembles a bizarre beach resort: the retreating waters left behind a deep layer of fine sand that covers the once-fertile land.

The bewildered villagers, living in tents pitched on the sandy plain, are wondering what to do next. "We had rice under here, about to be harvested," says one man, poking the sand with a stick. "At dawn, I was a wealthy man. At dusk I was the poorest person, with no house, no wheat – nothing," laments another.

The farmers say it could take several seasons to clear the sand and start farming again. In the meantime, they have no money or housing, just a couple of rope beds and cooking pots stowed inside the tents. Asked how he will survive, Riaz Hussain points a finger to the sky. "Allah," he says.

The villagers say they feel abandoned. Soldiers and revenue officials came to visit and take photos, an old woman says. Nobody returned. Only the mail service is working, but that brings bitter news. One man, standing near the ruins of his home, holds up a newly arrived electricity bill. "It's like a joke," he says.

The villagers blame Hanjra, the local landowner, for manipulating the flow of water through the Taunsa barrage – a giant structure spanning the Indus two miles away – in order to save his lands, including a game reserve.

Now, they say, they will vote for Dasti. "He is the friend of the poor," says one. "We'll give him a chance."

The son of a part-time wrestler, Dasti established his populist touch long before the floods. He set up a free bus service called the "Benazir bus", after the late leader of his Pakistan People's party. He has a reputation for listening to the woes of the poor, giving birth to his nickname, Rescue 15, after the local emergency hotline.

Unlike most upper-class Pakistanis, he does not speak English, and says he lives with his mother in the mud house where he was born. "I don't have the money to move out," he says.

And he is fearlessly irreverent towards authority. At one stop, an old man leans into his car to ask for his business card. "So that I can show it in case the police stop me," says the man. "Screw the police," replies Dasti.

"Everyone's after me," he says later as he drives at an alarming speed down the rutted road, weaving between lumbering rainbow-coloured trucks. "The judiciary, the media, the establishment. But these people love me. They are praying for me."

The upstart is also shadowed by controversy. By his own admission he has faced 42 police prosecutions, including some for murder, six of which are outstanding. In 2001 he was jailed for 15 months. "It was a fake case and everyone knew it. The bigwigs pressured the police to prosecute me," he says. Last March the supreme court disqualified Dasti from parliament for faking his degree – a legal requirement – although he was easily re-elected in the subsequent byelection. And for a poor politician he is mysteriously well funded. He borrows the shiny Jeep from a supporter, he said, while the 1,000-rupee handouts come from his parliamentary allowance.

His accusations against the feudals have touched a raw nerve nationally as well as locally. The power of the landed elite is often cited as a major structural flaw in Pakistani politics – an imbalance that hinders education, social equality and good governance (there is no agricultural tax in Pakistan).

In truth, though, the feudals' influence has waned sharply in recent years. The rising force in politics is the urbanised elite represented by the opposition leader, Nawaz Sharif, analysts say.

Southern Punjab, however, is a bastion of the old order. Speaking at his large farmhouse, Ahmed Yar Hanjra, Dasti's rival and a member of the provincial assembly, says his father and two uncles control about 2,500 acres of land between them. One uncle was elected to the Punjab assembly five times in the 1980s and 90s; another was the district mayor. He scorns Dasti: "He is a most corrupt man, he just pretends to stand up for the poor. We don't consider him an equal to us."

Hanjra vehemently denies diverting the floodwaters to save his land. "Ninety-nine per cent of our land has also been flooded," he says. He has thrown himself into relief efforts for the poor, he adds. But they are hard to satisfy. "In this area, if you give them again and again, they will still tell you they have nothing. They are not grateful."

According to Asad Sayeed, a Karachi-based analyst, the floods are already changing the face of rural Pakistan. Farmers have migrated to the big towns; some are likely to renege on their debts to landlords. Disputes over land boundaries, some violent, are likely.

But whether the floods will change power structures, he says, depends on whether more populists like Dasti sprang up. But the conditions are right. "Whatever social change was taking place will now be accelerated as a result of the floods," he says.

Economic cost

After inundating an area larger than England, the flood has crippled Pakistan's agriculture, the heart of its teetering economy.

The waters swept away 2.4m hectares (6m acres) of crops – fruit, wheat, cotton, rice – while 1.2 million large animals, such as cattle, below, and 6 million poultry have perished. In the cities, food prices have soared, raising already high inflation.

And the floods wiped out the equivalentof 2m bales of cotton, a costly blow to the £12bn textile industry, which employs 10 million. The EU agreed in September to waive tariffs on Pakistani textiles, but only temporarily. Similar US measures have been blocked by politicians.

The flood has one silver lining: with the soil enriched by the flooding, some areas expect a record harvest in spring.

But there may not be enough labour. With so many homes destroyed, many people have left.

Pakistan's floodridden lands are crying out for political change ? but can Jamshed Dasti bring it? | World news | The Guardian
 
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Dasti answers the calls of his constituents, they elect him. Simple as that.


A deeply flawed idea that informs Westminster on the Indus -- The voice of god? Lets have less of such a conception of god and the good.
 
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Anyone with the intent to work for rescue can do it... No hard science involved in it, the trick is to prevent it from happening. The degree requirement, while does not guarantee freedom from corruption or any degree of patriotism, its there to ensure more well rounded qualities exist with the leader.

To top it all off, Dasti lied by presenting a fake certificate, he lied to his constituents as well - in the wake of the natural disaster, they just can't care about it.
 
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But anyone having Graduate degree don't possess enough guts to win elections despite so much "solid" propagenda against him.

BTW ... "Solid" thing means piece of paper .... not in only your hands ... also in university's record.
 
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