Pakistan Study Assingment
Pakistan Study Assingment
Pakistan Study Assingment
ABUHURAIRA
CLASS
ROLL NO
8613
Submitted to
Madam KINZA
Subject Assignment
PAKISTAN STUDY
Course code
321
س
( پاکس تان م لم ل تگ)ق
Abbreviation PML (Q) Shujaat Hussain
President
Founder Founder
Mian Muhammad Azhar
Shujaat Hussain
Youth wing
PML Youth Wing
PML Minorities Wing Kalpana Devi
Liberal conservatism
Conservatism[1]
Centre[2] to Centre-right[3]
Political position
Senate
1 / 100
National Assembly
5 / 342
Punjab Assembly
10 / 371
Sindh Assembly
0 / 168
KPK Assembly
1 / 145
Balochistan
Assembly 0 / 65
0 / 49
Azad Kashmir
Assembly
0 / 33
Gilgit-Baltistan
Assembly
Election symbol
Party flag
س
The Pakistan Muslim League (Quaid e Azam ) : ) ; پاکس تان م لم ل تگ )قAcronyms: PML(Q),
PML-Q, PMLQ) is a centrist to centre-right-nationalist political party in Pakistan. As of the
2018 parliamentary election, it has a representation of 5 seats. It previously served as an ally of
former Prime Minister Raja Pervez Ashraf's government, and led a joint election campaign in
2013 alongside Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) in Punjab and Balochistan provinces against its
rival Pakistan Muslim League (N), a fiscally conservative and centre-right force.
Its leadership and members were once part of the Pakistan Muslim League (Nawaz) presided by
former prime minister Nawaz Sharif. After the 1997 general elections, political differences
arose that ultimately led to the creation of a faction inside the party. The dissidents, led by
Shujaat Hussain, called for strong and vocal support for the 1999 military coup d'état staged and
led by then-Chief of Army Staff and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
Committee General Pervez Musharaff. In 2002, dissident leaders launched the party, focused on
President Pervez Musharraf’s government. It later became an integral part of Musharraf's
government and appointed their own Prime minister, Shaukat Aziz.
Dissident leader Shujaat Hussain was named party president, while the party began the
annihilation of PML(N)'s structure. Full advantage was taken by Musharraf, who granted
opportunities to the party with a goal of exclusive support of the government and to diminish the
public support of Sharif.
National security adviser Tarik Aziz had played a pivotal role who "had engineered the idea in
advance of the elections of 2002 of converting the PML(N)'s centre-right ideology back to
centrism, PML(Q), the Q standing for "Quaid-e-Azam". However the idea collapsed when PML
(N) emerged as the largest conservative front and the largest opposition party. The party suffered
many setbacks thereafter when its membership began to disintegrate after forming a separate
bloc with close association with the PML-N, including the Like-Minded and Avami League
blocs and second, the former president's bloc. Senior members joined PML-N, while the junior
leadership defected to the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI).
In September 2010, PML (Q) joined the similar ideological faction, PML-F, forming the
Pakistan Muslim League (Pir Pagara), but this was short-lived when in May 2011 the party
joined the Yousaf Raza Gillani led-government to fulfill the gap left by its rival PML-N.
However, the party announced its resignation from the Parliament, citing the failure of the
Pakistan Peoples Party to resolve the energy crisis as the reason, which had direct impact on
the federal government. The situation become better by giving relief in fuel prices on 15
History:
The founder of PML (Q) is Mian Muhammad Azhar. It attracted influential members such as
the Chaudhary's of Gujrat, Pervaiz Elahi and Chaudhary Shujaat Hussain. 75% of its elected
members are former "big men" of the Zia ul Haq and Nawaz Sharif governments. PMLN
factions broke away in 2001 under NAB's pressure to form PML (Q). They were staunch
Musharraf supporters and consider him their mentor. Although, he was sometimes mistakenly
cited as a member, he was never part of the party.
• Gross Domestic Product (GDP), grew from $63 billion in 1999 to $162 billion, at an average
of 7%.
• Per capita income increased to $925 from $435.
• Revenue collection, which was at around Rs. 300 billion in 1999, crossed a record Rs. 1
trillion.
• Public Sector Development Programme (PSDP), which hovered around Rs. 80 billion during
the 1988–99 period, reached Rs. 520 billion.
• Foreign direct investment (FDI), which was around $300 million in 1999, grew to $6.5
billion.
• Remittances were at a record $5.5 billion.
• Exports rise from $9 billion to $17 billion.
• Foreign Exchange reserves $16 billion.
• Karachi Stock Exchange (KSE) index rose to 14,000 from 1000 in 1999.
However, opponents point to all the achievements where over 10 years, at time of strong global
economic growth, low oil prices and relative to other countries the achievements were average,
particularly since a massive balance of payments crisis began in 2008.
United PML:
In May 2004, various PML factions and other political parties merged with PML-Q to form a
united Pakistan Muslim League (PML), thus leaving out only the Nawaz Sharf-led faction. They
included former President Farooq Leghari's Millat Party, Jahan Zaib Awan, National Peoples
Party, Arbab Ghulam Rahim's Sindh Democratic Alliance, Hamid Nasir Chattha's PML
(Junejo), Pir Pagara's PML (Functional), Manzoor Wattoo's PML (Jinnah), and Ijaz-ul-Haq's
PML (Zia). Later on, the Pir Pagara led faction called the PML-Functional again parted ways
with the united PML, which reduced the number of parties called Pakistan Muslim League to
three: PMLQ, PML-N and PML-F.
Wings of PMLQ:
As a major political party, the PMLQ has several active wings:
As of 2017 Chaudhry Shujaat Hussain was president of PML-Q. He was elected unopposed.
Senator Mushahid Hussain Syed is the secretary general, also unopposed.
A rift within party leadership emerged with a faction calling themselves the 'Like-minded' bloc,
who opposed the Chaudhry's of Gujrat leadership bid.
The new faction announced that Hamid Nasir Chattha would be the chairman, Salim Saifullah
the president, and Humayun Akhtar Khan the secretary general. Other prominent leaders to join
this parallel set-up includes (former foreign ministers) Khurshid Mahmud Kasuri (appointed as
chairman of the steering committee) former information and organising secretary PML-Q Azeem
Chaudhary, former member parliament Asiya Azeem, Gohar Ayub Khan and Kashmala
Tariq.
In February 2010, the mainstream PML-Q was further affected by the resignation of
Muhammad Ijaz-ul-Haq, and the revival of his Pakistan Muslim League (Z) party
Alliances
Party President Chaudhry Shujaat Hussain and Chaudhry Pervaiz Elahi consistently supported
Musharraf. They were faithful to the general in even the most adverse circumstances.
Shujaat Hussain's father Chaudhry Zahoor Elahi was initially a supporter of President Ayub
Khan, but when Amir Mohammad Khan favoured some of his local opponents, he parted ways
with Ayub's Convention Muslim League. He opposed Zulfikar Ali Bhutto and later joined Zia's
government. He was killed allegedly by Al-Zulfikar organisation for his support to General Zia.
After Zahoor's death, Chaudhry Shujaat Hussain continued to support Zia and his Islamization
policies. Once the establishment parted ways with Nawaz Sharif in 1999, Hussain and Zahoor
came to the rescue of stability and saw their new party PML (Q) win the general elections of
2002. Both the Chaudhry brothers were accused of financial scandals, including the Cooperative
Scandal, sugar scandal and bank loan defaults, but none of them were ever proven or even
pursued by the government. Nowadays, the Q-league has been reduced to a minor party as their
vote-bank has been devoured by both Pakistan Peoples Party and Pakistan Tehreek-e-
Insaf.
Other leaders:
National Assembly
Zafarullah Khan
2002 7,500,797 25.7% 142 / 342 142
Jamali
References