By
Musbah Abdul Baqi, IOL Pakistan Correspondent
ISLAMABAD,
October 12 (IslamOnline) - With nearly all the votes counted Saturday,
October 12, in Pakistan, Political contacts and consultations started
for government formation, as no single party was able to muster enough
seats to form a government at the national level. The anti-U.S.
Islamic Alliance, however, is prepared to flex its muscles in a hung
parliament.
The
18-month-old pro-government party Pakistan Muslim League-Quaid (PML-Q)
led the other parties on 77 seats, followed by banned ex-Premier
Benazir Bhutto's Pakistan People's Party (PPP) with 63 seats.
However,
PML-Q president, Mian Muhammad Azhar, lost his own electoral battle in
one of Lahore’s constituencies to a member of the Islamic Group,
Salman Bitt, who ran as an independent candidate.
The
six-party Muttahidda Majlis-e-Amal (MMA) (Meaning, in Urdu, the
executive unionist assembly) Islamic alliance won 53 seats, a stunning
gain over 1997 elections when the fundamentalists took only four.
The
other main opposition party, the once mighty Pakistan Muslim
League-Nawaz (PML-N) of former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif crashed to
just 14 seats.
Independent
candidates, for their part, snatched 20 seats, and 10 small parties
gained 15 seats.
The
federal Pakistani parliament is composed of 272 seats, in addition to
10 seats for minorities (Christians, Siekh, and Hindus), and 60 seats
reserved for women, out of which each party gets a number of seats
proportionate with the total seats it gained.
Each
province in Pakistan has its Provincial Parliament and cabinet. MMA
has won absolute majority in North West Frontier Province (NWFP),
bordering Afghanistan. Other provinces will have to rely on coalition
cabinets, just like any central government to be formed now.
The
Islamic Alliance, or MMA, consists of six religious parties. They are
The Islamic Group, led by Qadi Hussien Ahmed, Pakistan Scholars
Assembly-Norani Wing, led by Sheikh Shah Ahmed Norani, a veteran
Pakistani politician leading the MMA. There are also Islam Scholars
Assembly (Fadl al-Rahman Wing), Islam Scholars Assembly (Samie al-Haqq
Wing), both Wings were staunch supporters of Taliban in Afghanistan.
The fifth party is the Islamic Pakistani Movement, a Shiite group
founded by Scholar Sajid Naqawi, and the sixth is Hadith People
Assembly (Sajid Meir Wing), a Sunni fundamentalist group, led by
Professor Sajid Mier.
Observers
differed in explaining the reasons behind the great gains achieved by
the religious parties. Some believe it was due to concentrating their
efforts for the first time on general elections. Others say it was due
to the high anti-U.S. sentiments amongst the silent majority of
Pakistan, often referred to by Musharraf as only 3% of the population.
Meanwhile,
some political analysts cast doubts over the alliance’s ability to
work successfully on the political level, due to the big differences
in thinking and political agendas of the six parties.
However,
leaders of the religious parties dismissed that idea and pledged to
work together and seize this historic opportunity, so as to make a
difference on the Pakistani political level.
Emir
of the Islamic Group in NWFP, Professor Mohammad Ibrahim, speaking to
IslamOnline Saturday, October 12, stressed the same meaning. “My
party is willing to go till the end to keep this coalition together.
It is the only way [for religious parties] to make a difference. It is
high time for traditional religious schools to cooperate with modern
progressive religious groups,” he said.
The
end game now, according to observers and analysts, is that the Islamic
Alliance has become the cornerstone of any future government, as it
holds the balance of power. This will definitely lead to conflicts
with Musharraf, whose policies apparently run counter to the anti-U.S.
campaign that pushed the Islamic Alliance almost near to the helm of
power