Former
Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif is flying home this weekend from
self-imposed exile ahead of the general elections.
Few, if any, could have
scripted the dramatic turnaround for someone who has been a thorn in the side
of the powerful military for so much of his long career.
When he was last in
Pakistan, Mr Sharif was serving time for corruption - but he was allowed to
leave jail on health grounds in November 2019.
Now it appears the military
is prepared to welcome back the man it toppled in a coup - and he could even
end up being PM again.
That's not all - in a
striking reversal of roles, his rival Imran Khan, who replaced him as prime
minister in 2018, is now himself in jail after falling out with the military.
Despite a sense of déjà vu, it's far from certain exactly how things will play out.
What will happen when Sharif lands?
The three-time former PM
has spent the past four years in London, after securing bail to leave jail in
an air ambulance, ostensibly for medical treatment.
He's been stepping up his
political engagements since 2022 when Imran Khan was ousted in a parliamentary
vote of no confidence.
Mr Sharif's PML-N party
took over governing Pakistan at that point, with younger brother Shahbaz in
charge. Now Big Brother is coming home - he's due to fly into Islamabad from
Dubai on Saturday and then on to his home city Lahore for a public rally.
There are court cases still
outstanding but he won't fear being arrested as he has secured bail until a
hearing next week.
It's not the first time Mr
Sharif has returned from exile.
In 2007, he and fellow
opposition leader Benazir Bhutto struck a historic deal with the military to
take part for the first time in elections since the 1999 coup that had unseated
him.
All major opposition
parties were on the same page then, unlike now - Ms. Bhutto's Pakistan People's
Party (PPP) ended up sweeping to victory, weeks after she was assassinated at
an election rally.
Will
Sharif be PM again?
His party has made clear he
will be their PM candidate in elections due this year, and now delayed to 2024.
But the 73-year-old has a
number of issues to navigate - not least an economy in crisis, for which his
party is largely blamed, and widespread feelings the vote will not be fair
because his main opponent is locked up.
And then there's the
military, which has a big say in how Pakistan is run.
While abroad, the ex-PM has
been very vocal on occasion against the armed forces. In particular, he blamed
an ex-head of the feared ISI intelligence agency and the former army chief of
staff for political instability, charges they denied.
Mr Sharif said he'd been
the victim of "bogus cases" and accused the country's judges of
collusion. This, he said, had resulted in a crippled democracy that hadn't let
any of Pakistan's prime ministers complete their constitutional tenure in
office.
His political opponents
suspect a deal has been made with the military to allow him to return - but
they say it's still not certain Nawaz Sharif will win the elections.
Zulfi Bukhari, from Imran
Khan's Pakistan Tehreek-e Insaf (PTI) party, told the BBC: "I don't see
him becoming PM again because there are cases against him and also, he is
disqualified for life from politics according to court orders."
·
Is Imran Khan's political future over now he is in jail?
·
Imran Khan's supporters are silenced but determined
But many observers think
things will pan out differently, in Mr Sharif's favour.
"The landscape and
script of our politics haven't changed. Only the political characters are
changed," political analyst Wajahat Masood.
"In the 2018 elections, Imran Khan was facilitated by the establishment during elections. This time the army is busy making elections for Nawaz Sharif."
There's no word from the
military on whether it prefers Mr Sharif and it and Imran Khan have always
denied claims they ever colluded before falling out.
Will the elections be fair?
With Imran Khan in jail and his party weakened after a crackdown following violent protests over his arrest in May, many say the vote won't be fair.
The PTI had been ahead in
the polls before its leader's arrest but Zulfi Bukhari says there is now no
level playing field - most other parties agree.
"How can you put the most popular political leader of the country
behind bars before elections?" Mr Bukhari asked. "If you hold free
and fair elections, you will see how strong Imran Khan's vote bank is."
Nawaz Sharif's party said
similar things when he was jailed before the 2018 vote.
So political analysts see
history repeating itself, with the PML-N rather than the PTI the beneficiary
this time.
The main battleground is
the economy - the two parties trade blame for the mess it's in. Skyrocketing
inflation and the cost of living will be uppermost in voters' minds when they
finally get a chance to cast their ballots.
Despite PML-N claims that
Nawaz Sharif has been in power before and knows how to "fix everything
again", it's far from clear how he would do this.
And most Pakistanis are
deeply frustrated by what they see as their country's rotten system of
democracy. Young people especially now talk openly against politicians and the
involvement of the military in politics.
Can the army rely on Nawaz Sharif?
The military, which plays a
prominent role in Pakistan's politics and has seized power in a number of
coups, has a long, chequered history with Nawaz Sharif.
But despite this, and the
lack of other obvious options, the military seems willing to give him another
try, observers like Wajahat Masood believe.
"First the military
launched Imran Khan thinking that was a better choice and he was a safe bet,
but after they felt their authority was being challenged, they decided to take
him down," says Mr Masood.
"Now it looks like
it's Nawaz Sharif's turn."
He and other analysts also detect signs of a deal between Mr Sharif and the establishment, despite the former PM's criticisms of the military from London.
They recall that early in his career Mr Sharif was himself seen as a product of the military and defended himself from the same criticisms as Imran Khan.
Given that Mr Sharif has been at odds with the military for most
of his career, how might he play his cards now?
"He won't be a 'Yes Sir' man," says former MP Nadeem
Afzal Chan.
He acknowledges Mr Sharif's history of confrontation with the establishment.
"But he knows the boundaries and he knows when to cross those boundaries and when to let go," says Mr Chan, who also served as spokesman for Imran Khan when he was prime minister.
However, Mr Chan and other experts do expect confrontation at some point - it's just a matter of time.
First, though, a date must be set for elections - and saving the economy from collapse will be the main focus of the campaign.
0 Comments