newspapers. Only PTV was available as the ‘electronic media’ at that time.
However a ‘very small segment’ (may be a 100 or so million people) of society expressed their displeasure over ‘General Sahib’s’ adventurous ride. A few thousands of them who were ‘advised’ to stay away from the route through which ‘General Sahib’ was to pass, was particularly furious.
May be it was the first time in the country’s history that people wrote and read so much about ‘Cycle’. Well, we must not forget the famous ‘Mirza Ki Bicycle’, one of the most popular short stories by the legendary satirist, Syed Ahmed Shah Pitras Bukhari.
A few people, who were opposed to ‘General Sahib,’ however, believed that his security staff was also not pleased as they ‘jogged’ all the way from the Army House to ‘Raja Bazaar’ on both sides of ‘General Sahib’. And they were the happiest when they came to know that ‘General Sahib’ has abandoned all his future plans to ride bicycle.
But it seems that the ‘cycle’ got imprinted on brains of some very important people and may be it was out of sheer unwavering commitment towards ‘General Sahib’ that the Islami Jamhoori Ittehad (IJI) decided to adopt ‘Cycle’ as their election symbol for the first time in the 1988 general elections.
Some people still claim that as the IJI was formed by those whose conscience awakes only years after retirement and are generally referred to as ‘Aabpara Walley’ that is why they picked ‘Cycle’ as the election symbol for the IJI. May be they were the people who advised ‘General Sahib’ to ride the bike in the first place. Mian Nawaz Sharif contested his first elections under the symbol of ‘Cycle’ at that time in 1988.
We believe it is just ‘green talk’!
In 1990 elections, ‘Mian Sahib’ rode to power on ‘Cycle’ but was unsaddled in 1993 when the Pakistan Muslim League-Junejo (PML-J) group won their claim to be the rightful heir to the symbol. ‘Mian Sahib’ decided to ride the ‘Tiger’ and limped to second place!
Over all these years ‘Cycle’ became the election symbol of the pro-establishment political party, thus it landed in the lap of PML-Q for the 2002 and 2008 general elections.
This time, it seems that the ‘Cycle’ has got stuck in a pretty deep rut. But evidently it is still worth something.
— Mobarik A. Virk