Urban youth rise up against feudal fiefdoms in Pakistan poll

Bloomberg

Near the rural town of Badin in southern Pakistan, about a four-hour drive from the financial capital of Karachi, dozens of men wait through the night for a chance to meet with Zulfiqar Mirza.
The landowner’s family holds sway in a part of Sindh province the size of the US state of Delaware, and villagers go to Mirza for everything from employment to education to settling disputes.
One of them, 69-year-old Khalid Hussain, said this month he needed help after being abandoned by his children. The Mirzas “help people out,” Hussain said while waiting at the family’s 700-acre estate. “I just want a job to feed my stomach.”
Local power brokers like the Mirzas may end up as kingmakers in the nuclear-armed nation after a July 25 election, with polls showing that no single party is likely to win a majority in Pakistan’s parliament.
For national politicians, courting large rural landholders known as “electables” is a Catch 22: Their support is essential to win elections in Pakistan, but many also tend to oppose measures like modernising the country’s labour and tax laws that would boost economic growth in the cash-strapped nation. Known as biradiri, the rural patronage system helps explain why Pakistan scores the lowest in Asia on Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index after Afghanistan, North Korea and Cambodia. While urbanisation and redistricting has steadily eroded the power of rural politicians — about 10 city constituencies were created this year — in many areas they still can provide favours, administer justice and even pressure villagers into voting for a certain candidate.
Feudalism is still “very strong” in the countryside, said Mustafa Kamal, the former mayor of Karachi, who heads the urban-focussed Pak Sarzameen Party.“The common man does not have that much strength to stand up to the feudal lord — he will just squeeze him like anything.”
That power structure has come under attack. Imran Khan, a former cricket star who has seen his popularity surge, has sought to rally younger, urban voters by denouncing feudalistic and dynastic parties that still dominate Pakistan’s political scene. Khan, whose anti-corruption campaign helped spur Sharif’s arrest, has pledged to widen Pakistan’s low tax base and strengthen government institutions.
Since the 1970s, the country has alternately been ruled by the military, the Pakistan Peoples Party and the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz led by Nawaz Sharif, a three-time prime minister serving a jail sentence for corruption.
Protests against landlords and their families have also taken place in cities. During a rally this month in Karachi, the convoy of Bilawal Bhutto Zardari — head of the Pakistan Peoples Party and son of assassinated PM Benazir Bhutto — was pelted with stones. At the last election more than 10 feudal politicians lost their seats.

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