Document #1177112
IRB – Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (Author)
Soon after the replacement of the Sindh
chief minister in March 1992, the leader of the Mohajir Qaumi
Mahaz's (MQM) labour union, who was a prominent member of the
ruling Islamic Democratic Alliance (IDA), was killed in Karachi
(UPI 21 Mar. 1992).
Operation "Blue Fox," whose objective was
to round up "bandits and terrorists" in Sindh, started in June 1992
when MQM factions began fighting with one another (FEER 2
July 1992, 23). The army was sent to several cities including
Karachi and Hyderabad, and to the countryside in order to
re-establish law and order (Asiaweek 5 June 1992). The army
proceeded to dismantle the MQM and arrested members of political
parties as well (FEER 6 Aug. 1992, 18). Protests and public
meetings were officially banned in Sindh (AFP 29 July 1992). The
government had previously been supportive of MQM's activities in
Sindh in order to counter the influence of the Pakistan People's
Party (PPP) and of Sindhi nationalist parties (Asiaweek 5
June 1992; 28 Aug. 1992; FEER 2 July 1992, 23). Following
the army intervention in Sindh, the MQM left the IDA and its main
leader, Altaf Hussain, has been in self-imposed exile in London
(FEER 6 Aug. 1992, 18; AFP 29 July 1992).
Although the army has promised to be
impartial in the conflict between the MQM and other groups in
Sindh, it has reportedly crushed the Mohajir movement and revealed
torture cells used by the Mohajirs against their opponents (The
Economist 3 July 1992; FEER 6 Aug. 1992, 18). The
president of Pakistan has granted the army a personal immunity from
civil and criminal liability during the operation in Sindh
(FEER 6 Aug. 1992, 19). The MQM is currently on uncertain
grounds, mostly due to the fact that it disassociated itself from
the government and that it is divided by an internal power struggle
(Carnegie Endowment 17 Nov. 1992). The Pakistani minister of
interior, Chaudhary Shujat Hussain, has categorically stated, on 6
October 1992, that the army would not withdraw from Sindh before
law and order was fully restored in the province (BBC Summary 9
Oct. 1992).
The MQM took over the municipal governments
of Karachi and Hyderabad in the late 1980s (FEER 6 Aug.
1992, 18). In Karachi, the police was therefore controlled by the
Mohajirs, and policemen were mostly Mohajirs (Department of
Political Science, Wake Forest University 10 Nov. 1992). However,
since the army intervention in Sindh, the municipal corporations
have not been functioning, and elected representatives are barred
from effective control of the cities (FEER 17 Nov. 1992).
The police forces in Karachi and Hyderabad have also undergone
changes in the government "Operation Clean-up" (The
Economist 3 July 1992). A splinter group, the MQM Haqiqi, has
developed in 1992 within the MQM and has distanced itself from the
militant views of Altaf Hussain (FEER 6 Aug. 1992, 19).
Agence France Presse (AFP) 29 July 1992.
"Tension Builds Up in Pakistan Ahead of Opposition's Protest."
(NEXIS)
Asiaweek [Hong Kong]. 28 August
1992. "The Trials of Nawaz Sharif."
_____. 5 June 1992. "Pakistan: An Army
Swoop in Sind."
BBC Summary of World Broadcasts. 9
October 1992. "Pakistan: Interior Minister Rules out Army
Withdrawal from Sindh." (NEXIS)
Carnegie Endowment, Washington. 17
November 1992. Telephone interview with a professor specializing in
Pakistani issues.
The Economist [London]. 3 July
1992. "The Clean-up."
Far Eastern Economic Review
(FEER), Islamabad. 17 November 1992. Telephone interview with
the Pakistan correspondent.
Far Eastern Economic Review
(FEER) [Hong Kong]. 6 August 1992. Hamish McDonald. "Things
Fall Apart: Sindh Crisis Pits Army Against Politicians," p. 18.
_____. 2 July 1992. Salamat Ali.
"Streets of Fire: Urban Violence Invites More Army Intervention,"
p. 23.
United Press International (UPI). 21
March 1992. "Pakistan Police Arrest 48 After Killing."
Wake Forest University, Department of
Political Science, Winston-Salem, North Carolina. 10 November 1992.
Telephone Interview with a professor specializing in Pakistan
politics.
Attachments
Agence France Presse (AFP) 29 July 1992.
"Tension Builds Up in Pakistan Ahead of Opposition's Protest."
(NEXIS)
Asiaweek [Hong Kong]. 28 August
1992. "The Trials of Nawaz Sharif."
_____. 5 June 1992. "Pakistan: An Army
Swoop in Sind." BBC Summary of World Broadcasts. 9 October 1992.
"Pakistan: Interior Minister Rules out Army Withdrawal from Sindh."
(NEXIS)
The Economist [London]. 3 July
1992. "The Clean-up."
Far Eastern Economic Review
(FEER) [Hong Kong]. 6 August 1992. Hamish McDonald. "Things
Fall Apart: Sindh Crisis Pits Army Against Politicians," p. 18.
_____. 2 July 1992. Salamat Ali.
"Streets of Fire: Urban Violence Invites More Army Intervention,"
p. 23.
United Press International (UPI). 21
March 1992. "Pakistan Police Arrest 48 After Killing."