described the meeting of great benefit and declared: ‘We are committed to working towards building a country where there is development and peace and we are also striving to achieve such a political climate which is conducive to further stability of the democratic process.”
In reply to a question about the meeting between Pagara and Hussain, Haleem Adil Sheikh, president of the PML-Q’s Karachi chapter, said: “We are one and the same working for the progress of the country.”
After his arrival at the airport, Hussain told journalists that he had come to the port city to reinvigorate the party’s allies.
Replying to queries, he admitted that he was still friends with the former president Asif Ali Zardari.
To another question, the PML-Q president said the Muttahida Qaumi Movement would soon return to the parliament.
He denied that the Karachi operation was being targeted against one political party, and said it should be conducted against all corrupt elements across the country.
From the airport, Hussain drove to the residence of former Sindh home minister Dr Zulfiqar Mirza to condole the death of his father.
After calling on Mirza, he met Pagara and the two discussed ways and means to form a grand political alliance. Both supported the Rangers-led operation in the city, and said corrupt and criminal elements should be eliminated.
Pagara said: “We have ironed out differences by holding talks inviting all likeminded elements to join the new party.”
Hussain said there was no harm in the merger of Muslim League factions and that only a “united party can help rescue the nation from the precipice”.
He further said: “We want a leadership which is acceptable to all. Political analysts are attaching much importance to the meetings of the heads of three factions in the current fast-changing political scenario with both the Pakistan People’s Party and the Muttahida Qaumi Movement apparently having been pushed to the wall.”
“It is not a unification but assimilation of the Muslim Leagues,” Pagara said while talking to the media after the meeting.
Hussain said Pakistan was passing through a critical phase, and “we must shun our petty differences and think about saving the country from danger to its solidarity”.
Hussain then met disgruntled PML- N leader and former chief minister Syed Ghous Ali Shah, who thought the PML was almost dead in Sindh due to the bad performance of Nawaz Sharif there and there was a dire need for a new political force to save the country.
Ghous said he was in contact with all major disgruntled party leaders who were willing to join the MML and in this connection he referred to some big names in the party, including Hamid Nasir Chattha and Zulfiqar Khosa, as well as to disgruntled PPP leaders Safdar Abbasi and Naheed Khan.
At the last leg of his tour of the city, the PML-Q chief met Musharraf and informed him about the details of the two meetings with regard to the new alliance.
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