DURING a rally at Lahores Regal Chowk on the eve of the 1990 elections, workers of the Pakistan Muslim League ( PML ) pressed their leader, Nawaz Sharif, to climb up on the seat of a huge, 40- foot- high bicycle, the Islami Jamhoori Ittehads election symbol. Nawaz demurred initially, but finally succumbed to his supporters demand. When he was finally perched there, he struck the casual observer as someone afraid of heights, a man much more relaxed with his feet on the ground.
But this is far from true. Nawaz Sharif had his sights set on the prime ministers gaddi, and romped home to power. However, the establishment which had helped him to become prime minister soon turned against him. Halfway through his tenure, he was dismissed on charges of corruption and spent three years in the opposition. Now, he has set his sights once again on the nations top post.
However, fearing that concentrating on his own constituency, Lahore, might indicate weakness, he lets his son Hussain Nawaz and wife Kulsoom Nawaz run the campaign there, while he himself is always on the move in a Russian- made helicopter. Rousing welcomes greet him wherever he lands, particularly in his home province, Punjab. A fleet of cars draped in green party flags wait at every landing site to whisk him away.
One of the countrys leading industrialists, Sharif mainly talks of his economic agenda for Pakistan. His pet projects this time are the public transport programme for self- employment and a six- lane motor- way started by his last government.
In his Lahore constituency, with the Pakistan Peoples Party having fielded a political lightweight, Sharifs main rival is cricket hero Imran Khan. Many analysts feel Imran is being used by the establishment to cut into Sharifs votebank. But Sharif, by supporting President Legharis brainchild, the Council for Defence and National Security, has shown that he too can work with the powers that be.
While publicly dismissing Imrans chances, the PML has against him, focussing on the Sita White scandal. Imrans Tehrik- e- Insaf has responded with Sharifs alleged liaison with Indian socialite Dilshad Begum. And in this mudslinging, the real issues facing the elecorate have been neglected.
But the mood in the PML camp is visibly upbeat. And while the whole country, including PML workers, is uncertain whether the elections will actually be held, Sharifs supporters are confident that a poll will result in a PML win. "Nothing can stop us from sweeping the polls," says PML secretary- general of Lahore, Pervez Rashid. In fact, Sharif seems like a cult figure for most PML supporters. He is incorruptible, a true visionary, honest and the only leader who can steer Pakistan to the road of economic development. As for Imrans challenge, Rashid says: "If you can bowl well, it does not imply you should be made prime minister of the country. You will see that Imran will get less votes than the number of wide balls he bowled in his cricketing career."
The PML s greatest advantage is the strong anti-PPP mood in the country. Benazir Bhutto presided over one of Pakistans worst economic crises. Nawaz is confident he will sweep the polls in all the four provinces. "This time the people of the federal capital will not find me in the prime ministers house or secretariat," he pledges. "I will roam in the streets of the country to take care of the problems faced by the masses."
Aware that talk of GDP figures and other economic indices may not hold the peoples attention, Nawaz promises: "Quran in translation will be a compulsory subject for students till Class X and Education Cards will be given to children for free primary education."
Sharif started his political career as a blue- eyed boy of General Zia- ul- Haq and former Punjab Governor Ghulam Jilani Khan. His supporters see nothing wrong with this, arguing that Zulfikar Ali Bhutto would have ended up nowhere if he didnt have Ayub Khan to guide him during his initial years in politics. Interestingly, Sharif also shares with Benazir a taste for expensive clothes.
Sharifs appetite, however, is legendary. During his stay at the Prime Ministers House during 1990- 1993, he reportedly paid from his own pocket for a 100 kg daily supply of meat. It remains to be seen whether he will have a chance to indulge himself again in Islamabad.