"Mujoda Govt Mulazmat Karahi Hai...", Mushahid Hussain Syed Told Everything
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00:00Are we close to a breakthrough? Can you sense it?
00:03I think we are heading in that direction.
00:05And 2025 will be a year of reconciliation and change.
00:10In the beginning or end of 2026, there is talk of elections.
00:15That if the current system is given enough time to decide the TORs for the elections, is this a possibility?
00:22I don't see elections, I see the Bangladesh model.
00:26Promotional governments will continue.
00:29There can be a change in the federal government.
00:31We need a Bangladesh type, Dr. Yunus type technocrat government.
00:35We also need a cooling off period.
00:37But why Mr. Shabaz? He is working brilliantly.
00:39He has a great page. What better choice could there be than Mr. Shabaz?
00:43Talk administratively.
00:45I am saying that bosses can transfer you.
00:48People are working in the government.
00:50So they can be transferred.
00:52Do you think this is in the interest of the party?
00:54Or is it out of the box?
00:56There can be a change in other ways as well.
00:59Everyone has a share in the provinces.
01:01In Punjab, Sindh, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.
01:04If they have a piece of the cake, the overall situation can change.
01:09In that change, everyone will say, Salam sir.
01:14What about those whose politics is at stake?
01:16For example, let's talk about PMLN.
01:18There is no politics right now.
01:21There is politics. That is what we have to save.
01:23That is why we have to pressurize it.
01:25Not politics. We have to save jobs.
01:27We have to save seats.
01:29There is politics in the public.
01:31There is no public politics.
01:33There are three political forces.
01:35One is your establishment.
01:37One is PTI.
01:39And the rest.
01:41They are all together.
01:43For the first time in our history,
01:45an entire political party has come together against an opposition party.
01:49Normally, they used to come together against the government.
01:51They came together against Ayub Khan.
01:53They came together against PPP.
01:56They came together against Mian Sahib.
01:58There was an alliance called GDA.
02:00And other alliances are formed.
02:02But it didn't happen that a party came together against a different party.
02:06This is the configuration.
02:08And everyone has agreed that the road to Islamabad lies through Rawalpindi.
02:12This is all agreed.
02:14Opposition as well.
02:15At one point, the agreement was reached.
02:17Mr. Tenkin, I think this is what you think.
02:19They are challenging him.
02:21If they had agreed, they would have agreed to Mr. Khan's side two years ago.
02:25I think this has happened.
02:27This is a perception.
02:29I don't say this.
02:31I think de facto they all agree that the road to Islamabad lies through Rawalpindi.
02:35Rawalpindi's perceptions change.
02:37Preferences change.
02:39That's what happened when I met them.
02:41They were very happy.
02:43On one hand, people were sad.
02:45They were sweating.
02:47On the other hand, they were celebrating.
02:49So you can see that the focus of both parties is not the public.
02:53It is the power structure.
02:55But how successful is the Bangladesh model in Bangladesh?
02:59Look where they have ended right now.
03:01Maybe they got some support temporarily.
03:03They have brought a revolution.
03:05250 people have been martyred.
03:07They have brought a revolution.
03:09A dictatorship which was entrenched.
03:11In which there was a proxy of India.
03:13They have brought it out.
03:15But there is a temporary stopgap arrangement.
03:17Structurally, you don't think so.
03:19No, there has been a transition.
03:21It's a complete change.
03:23In which country, Maria Sahiba,
03:25has a nation, a state,
03:27changed its father of the nation?
03:29Has this ever happened?
03:31Father of the nation has been changed.
03:33The entire narrative has changed.
03:35They have ruined it.
03:37Foreign policy has changed.
03:39With India, with Pakistan.
03:41What happened here last week?
03:43Where were they?
03:45Their number two was Pakistan.
03:47This is a big revolution.
03:49This is a revolutionary change.
03:51We should welcome it.
03:53They have become Muslim Bengal.
03:55But for that, blood was shed.
03:57250 people were martyred.
03:59There was disruption.
04:01It was a very dangerous situation.
04:03Haseena Wajid had to leave the country.
04:05She had to run.
04:07This is a very disruptive way.
04:09Revolution is not a dinner party
04:11or writing an essay or painting a picture.
04:13It's an act of violence by which
04:15one class overthrows another class.
04:17Hopefully, we will be able to work
04:19democratically and with a good transition.
04:21I think we can move forward
04:23and transition in a good way.
04:25Thank you very much, Mushait Hussain Saeed.