Karachi: Lawmakers from a major Pakistani opposition party resigned their seats yesterday in protest at what they describe as a campaign of victimisation against them The Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM), the fourth largest party in the National Assembly or lower house of parliament, quit all its seats in the assembly, in the Senate (upper house) and in the Sindh provincial assembly. The party, which dominates politics in the country’s largest city Karachi, says it has been unfairly targeted in a police and paramilitary crackdown on violence in the city, the Sindh provincial capital. Tensions have been rising between MQM chief Altaf Hussain and the powerful military establishment in recent weeks. “The members of parliament from MQM, eight senators, 24 MNAs (members of the National Assembly) and 51 members of provincial Sindh assembly, have resigned in protest against the injustice, political victimisation and pushing the party to wall,” senior party leader Farooq Sattar told reporters in Islamabad. Khawaja Izharul Hassan, a senior MQM figure in the Sindh provincial assembly, said the party was being singled out in the operation in Karachi. “We resigned because the MQM is being victimised in the garb of the targeted operation in Karachi for elimination of terrorism,” he said. A spokesman for the National Assembly said the speaker had received 23 out of 24 resignations and would pass them on to the Election Commission. The rift between the MQM and the military widened in June, when Hussain, who lives in exile in London, in an address to his workers accused the paramilitary Rangers of torturing and killing party workers and dumping their mutilated bodies on roadsides. The MQM has itself often been accused by critics of using extortion and murder to cement its power over the city. The party has accused law enforcement agencies of the extrajudicial killing of 40 of its workers and the forcible “disappearance” of 150 more. AFP
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