PESHAWAR: Pakistani politician Imran Khan’s party has sought the help of an elderly pro-Taleban cleric to initiate peace talks with the militants, party officials said yesterday.
Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party approached Sami Ul-Haq, nicknamed the “Father of the Taleban,” after emerging from elections as the largest party in the troubled northwestern province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.
Northwestern Pakistan is on the frontline of a nearly seven-year domestic Taleban insurgency and suffers near-daily bomb and shooting attacks blamed on militants.
Khan has called for an end to military operations and peace talks with the Taleban, making his party’s victory in the northwest a significant development.
Khan has vowed to put together a provincial coalition government in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and turn it into a “role model” for the rest of the country. “We will talk to all stakeholders for establishment of peace in our province, meeting with Maulana Sami Ul-Haq was a part of that,” Shaukat Yousafzai, a party leader who won a seat for the party in the provincial assembly said.
Sami Ul-Haq is chief of his own faction of the religious Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam (JUI-S) party and runs a madrassa that educated several Taleban leaders.
Yousafzai said a PTI delegation led by Pervez Khattak, the incoming provincial chief minister, met Sami Ul-Haq late Monday.
Hamid Ul-Haq, the cleric’s son and a former MP, confirmed that PTI leaders came to seek support.
“They asked Sami Ul-Haq to play his role in establishment of peace in the province,” Haq said. “Sami Ul-Haq told the delegation that he will play his role in establishment of peace and initiation of peace talks.” Pakistan’s incoming Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif on Monday said he was open to talks with the Taleban, saying bringing peace was one of his top priorities.
Pakistan’s umbrella Tehreek-e-Taleban (TTP) movement in February signaled its willingness to enter peace talks with the government but also stepped up attacks against Sharif’s rival Pakistan People’s Party and its main allies, drastically curtailing their ability to campaign during the election.
Previous Pakistani governments, as well as the military, have forged ad hoc peace deals with insurgent factions in various parts of the northwestern tribal belt, which have often broken down quickly.
The Taleban, who denounce democracy as un-Islamic, killed more than 150 people during the election campaign, including 24 on polling day itself.
Taleban spokesman Ehsanullah Ehsan had said the insurgents would “wait until political parties form their government” but said before the polls that anyone who “comes into conflict with Islam” would be targeted.
Suicide, bomb and gun attacks blamed on Taleban and Al-Qaeda-affiliates have killed nearly 6,000 people since July 2007.
Khan to leave hospital today
Imran Khan is to leave hospital today, his party and medics said yesterday, two weeks after breaking bones in his back in a fall at an election rally.
The 60-year-old was ordered by doctors to remain immobile in a hospital bed with fractured vertebrae and a broken rib after falling from a hoist raising him to the stage at a rally just days before the May 11 general election.
Shireen Mazari, spokeswoman for Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaaf (PTI) party, said the former cricket star was feeling better and had managed to walk in hospital.
“Imran Khan will be discharged from hospital Wednesday,” Mazari said. “I have just talked to Imran Khan who told me that he will be going home tomorrow.” Khwaja Nazir, spokesman for Lahore’s Shaukat Khanum Memorial Hospital, where Khan has been treated, confirmed that the PTI chief would be moving home on Wednesday.
“He has already worn a brace around his back, which he will have to use for four to six weeks,” Nazir said.
Khan electrified much of the campaign with his calls for reform and galvanized many young people to take part for the first time.
Chinese escape bomb attack
A roadside bomb exploded near the seafront in Karachi yesterday likely targeting a van full of Chinese port workers, police said, a day before Chinese Premier Li Keqiang arrives in the capital, Islamabad. No one was hurt.
Karachi, the nuclear-armed country’s key port, is home to 18 million people. It typically sees about a dozen murders a day, a combination of political killings, attacks by the Pakistan Taleban and sectarian militant groups, and street crime.
“Apparently, the Chinese who are working at the harbor were the target of the explosion,” senior police officer Nasir Aftab said.
Li arrives in Islamabad today on the second leg of his first official trip since taking office in March after a visit to Pakistan’s archrival, India.
Pakistan and China consider each other “all-weather friends.” Their close ties have been underpinned by wariness of India and a desire to hedge against US influence across the region.
In 2004, two Chinese engineers working in Pakistan were kidnapped by the Pakistan Taleban. One was later rescued but the other killed.