Chronicle of an arrest foretold, Najam Sethi
Altaf Husain’s fate was foretold. With his recent arrest in London, the
noose has been tightened. This is the beginning of the end for him and for the
MQM as structured and led by him for over two and a half decades, mostly from
exile in London.
For over two years, British
authorities have been investigating three serious charges against him –
involvement in the murder of the MQM leader Imran Farooq, money laundering, and
hate speech. In each case, there appeared to be sufficient evidence to indict
him sooner or later.
Scotland Yard has tracked the two
alleged murderers of Imran Farooq — Mohsin Ali Syed and Kashif Kamran — to
Pakistan where they are held captive by the ISI. The London Metropolitan Police
have raided several MQM properties, including the one in which Altaf Hussain
lives, and seized over £400,000 in laundered cash. Investigations have proved
that several properties in London were purchased by Altaf Hussain and his
front-men from laundered funds. The London police is inundated with citizen
complaints protesting a hate speech by Altaf Hussain against supporters of
Imran Khan protesting alleged MQM rigging of the elections in Karachi last
year. In the last year or so, several senior MQM leaders in London have been
questioned “under caution”, a couple were arrested and then released on bail
and prohibited from leaving the country. Recently, Altaf Hussain’s bank
accounts in the UK were frozen and reports surfaced suggesting that he might
have obtained his British passport by invoking dubious claims. This compelled
him recently to make a desperate attempt to try and obtain a Pakistani passport
and alert his MQM cadres in Karachi to get ready to “face” the developing
situation, an implied threat to shut down Karachi that has temporarily
materialised. What next?
Altaf Hussain will probably obtain
bail in the money laundering case. But the murder of Imran Farooq will hang
over his head like the sword of Damocles until the British authorities are able
to extradite the two alleged murderers from Pakistan and nail the evidence.
Meanwhile, however, Altaf Hussain’s health, which is already sinking, is
expected to incapacitate him in custody. Since he will be “watched” and
“monitored” carefully, it is likely that he will lose his close and
confidential contacts with key party cadres and messengers quickly and his
control over party affairs will gradually dissipate. This will hasten the
process of fissures and divisions within the MQM that followed the spotlight of
the British authorities on Altaf Hussain in the last two years and which led to
the ouster or escape of close aides like Advocate Anis and Mustafa Kamal in recent
times.
Several overt and covert developments
on the MQM front may be expected in London and Karachi. For starters, a degree
of tension and nervousness among London-based aides and workers like Nadeem
Nusrat and Anwar Bhai will manifest itself in conspiratorial huddles about
power and protection which will weaken Altaf Hussain’s iron grip over the UK
office. Some MQM people may also be emboldened to secretly seek the protection
of the British police in exchange for giving information and evidence regarding
the affairs of the MQM in general and Altaf Hussain in particular. Others may
opt to quietly flee the UK for safer shores instead of risk being tainted,
challenged or chained in the aftermath of the crisis. A couple of senior aides
who are “under caution” already may be hauled up by the police again.
We should also expect feverish
activity within the rank and file of the MQM in Karachi to cope with the crisis
or take advantage of it. The man to watch is Governor Ishratul Abad. He is the
face of the MQM that is acceptable to the military establishment, PPP and PMLN.
He has managed to survive the vicissitudes of fortune spanning three regimes in
Islamabad, and the unending idiosyncrasies, moods and tempers of Altaf Hussain
for nearly fourteen years. Factions of the MQM led by Afaq, Aamir and Farooq
Sattar, who are also all survivors, will vie with him for power.
The military establishment, rather
than the PPP or PMLN leadership, will play a critical role in events. The corps
commander Karachi has already warned the MQM not to try and forcibly shut down
the street in Karachi. The ISI is already negotiating with the British
authorities regarding the extradition of Mohsin and Kashif in exchange for a
couple of Baloch separatists. The Rangers are expected to take full advantage
of the confusion and uncertainty in the MQM to strike deeper and more
effectively in Operation Clean-Up.
It is the PTI, however, that is poised to extract a
longer-term benefit from the slow but inevitable dissolution of the MQM that is
on the cards. That is why Imran Khan has swiftly offered an olive branch to the
rank and file of the MQM that may be geared up to break free of the fearful
shackles of Altaf Hussain.
- See more at: http://www.thefridaytimes.com/tft/chronicle-of-an-arrest-foretold/#sthash.6wiDPB4q.dpuf
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