Mahtab Bashir
Islamabad
03335363248
PM Imran Khan’s parrot-like rhetoric ‘No NRO’ or
‘Kisi Ko Nahi Choron Ga’ yesterday and today has somehow cemented the belief
about him as being ‘intoxicated’. But what about hundreds of thousands of those
‘non-intoxicated’ audience who has been clapping on his daze statement of mind
(statement). (English translation of an Urdu tweet by this scribe).

Since
the moment was about projects and roads, and especially since the Chinese
ambassador was reportedly in attendance, one expected to be spared the usual
“No NRO” speech that the nation is treated to every time the prime minister
makes an outing. Yet not only was there a lot of “No NRO,” he also chewed into
the opposition a lot more than usual. And nobody was laughing, except senior
government officials eager to please the prime minister perhaps, when Imran
Khan mimicked Bilawal Bhutto’s Urdu accent. Such antics hardly harm the
opposition, especially when everybody is so used to hearing the same remarks
over and over again. If anything, Bilawal has been enjoying a wave of social
media sympathy since immediately after Imran’s speech.
The PTI and its Prime Minister is disturbed at former PM
Nawaz Sharif’s departure for treatment abroad after repeated assertions by
Imran Khan not to give an NRO to anyone. The self-righteous PM put the
responsibility on the court and blamed the judiciary for maintaining dual
standards of justice, one for the powerful and the other for the powerless. He
demanded that the judiciary restore public trust in itself.

Khan
gave undertakings to alliance partners which were difficult to fulfill. Now, each
one is asking for its pound of flesh. The MQM wants the fulfilment of huge
financial commitments besides taking it into confidence in policymaking. The
PML-Q leadership sought a humane treatment for Mr Sharif. The Chaudhries also
expressed reservations about the ruling party’s performance, maintaining that
if the government failed to undertake course rectification, none would be
willing to become Prime Minister within a few months. The GDA complained that
the PM was ignoring Sindh. The allies are reminding Khan that he is
running the country with a wafer thin majority.
Distresses
in the case of the PTI are coming not as single spies but in battalions. The
NAB has suddenly felt the need to ensure that accountability is not seen to be
one-sided and that this requires looking into the cases of leaders who had been
in power for the last 12 months. The ECP, which had allowed the PTI’s foreign
assets case linger on for years, has decided to hear it on day-to-day basis.

Only
very recently, the government had to withdraw as many as 11 presidential
ordinances, which it muscled through the House, when the opposition threatened
a no-confidence motion against the deputy speaker. How does the government expect
this particular, rare example of reconciliation in the national assembly to
play out now? Already PTI’s performance is not much to write home about in
areas that really matter. Foreign relations stand more or less where PML-N left
them, especially the matter getting Uncle Sam to resume the free aid, and the
less said about the economy the better. If, somewhat correctly, the finance and
foreign ministries are hamstrung because of the rot they inherited, what is the
excuse about failure to legislate?
The only way for the PTI to complete its tenure
is to seek the opposition’s support. The mainstream opposition wants Mr Khan
not because it likes him, but because it needs him to keep the system on rails.
They want electoral reforms, NAB reforms and a third tenure for an elected
government leading to a smooth transition of power. For this Imran Khan will
have to tone down his rhetoric, treat opposition leaders decently and develop
working relations with the opposition.
Eventually,
surely, the government will realise that taking the opposition along is an
essential requirement of representative government. But the longer it takes,
the more it will paralyse the whole system. And, as always, the common man will
continue to pay the price for a direction-less government trying to find its
feet.