The Haqiqi Mohajir Quami
Movement (MQM-H) is a splinter outfit of the erstwhile Mohajir Quami
Movement (MQM),
which is now known as the Muttahida Quami Mahaz (MQM-A) of Altaf Hussain.
Disagreements between Altaf Hussain and the then MQM’s two prominent
militant leaders, Afaq Ahmed and Aamir Khan had first surfaced towards the
end of 1991. The formal split and formation of the MQM (H) came about in
June 1992 after Operation Cleanup launched by Pakistani security
forces in Karachi. The dissidents attached Haqiqi meaning real or
authentic in Urdu as a suffix to the MQM acronym as an assertion of the
outfit's legitimacy. Many former MQM members who were expelled from the
Altaf faction due to alleged criminal links joined the Haqiqi faction.
Ever since the formation of
the MQM (H), Karachi and other urban regions of Sindh have been rocked by
internecine clashes within the majority Mohajir community.* There were
several incidents of targeted killings whereby terrorists of one faction
would attack members or sympathisers of the other. These had peaked in
1997 and several bystanders too were killed in these attacks. In June, the
headquarters of the MQM (H) was attacked by suspected MQM (A) terrorists
which sparked off a series of attacks by each faction targeted at the
other and over sixty people were killed in the month.
Prior to this, the violent
clashes in these areas were between Mohajir militants and extremists of
other ethnic communities such as the Sindhis, Pathans and Punjabis. The
MQM (A) has consistently accused Pakistani security forces and
intelligence agencies of creating and fostering the MQM (H) in order to
weaken the Mohajir movement. Several Pakistani analysts have endorsed this
accusation.
The level of violence in
Karachi and other urban regions of Sindh have declined. Several strong-arm
measures taken by the Pakistan government, including repeated crackdowns
initiated by police and army units since 1992 has considerably weakened
both factions of the MQM. In 1998, several crackdowns were initiated and
scores of activists of both factions were either arrested or killed in
encounters. Since then, there have been only isolated reports of clashes
between the two factions such as the February 2000 killing of an MQM (A)
activist and the killing of an MQM (H) activist in December 2001. Either
faction has claimed several victims of criminal violence, and the other
faction would be blamed. Police sources largely reject these claims.
On the ideological front,
the MQM (H) claims that continuing socio-economic and political injustices
have alienated the Mohajirs and compelled them to seek a separate province
within the geographical boundary of Pakistan. The outfit also asserts that
if the rights of the Mohajirs are not accepted, demands for a separate
province would get accentuated. The MQM (H) also asserts that any decision
regarding the division of Sindh would have to be taken by the Federal
government in consultation with the provincial leadership. It has also
pointed out that demanding a separate province within the limits of
Pakistan should not be construed as being against the integrity of the
country.
The MQM (A), however,
accuses the Haqiqi faction of involvement in extortion in Karachi and that
the latter merely ‘serves the interests’ of the Pakistani government.
The Rangers, a security force of the Federal government is often accused
by the MQM (A) of having close links with the MQM (H). According to the
MQM (A) chief, Altaf Hussain the MQM (H) is bereft of any agenda of its
own.
The MQM (H) has survived
without the sort of political mandate enjoyed by the Altaf Hussain group
and controls certain neighbourhoods in Karachi by force. In 1986-87, the
MQM (A), which as a coalition partner of then Prime Minister Nawaz
Sharief’s, Pakistan Muslim League, had repeatedly accused the MQM (H) of
creating ‘no-go areas’ in Karachi, localities where MQM (H) activists
were preventing MQM (A) activists from entering. But MQM (H) leader Afaq
Ahmed while denying the existence of "no-go areas" maintains
that it is a "baseless term". According to the Haqiqi faction,
these are the areas where the MQM-A and his cadres have unleashed a reign
of terror. News reports also mention that Malir, Landhi, Shah Faisal
Colony and Korangi areas which were the strong holds of MQM (A) till a
short while ago are now under the control of the Haqiqi faction.
According to recent news
reports, the Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan (SSP)
is backing the Haqiqi faction. These sources indicate that sectarian
killings leading up to the Masjid-e-Hur massacre in Karachi, on October
10, 1999 in which nine persons were killed, had targeted non-Mohajirs, and
even in this incident, the victims were primarily Punjabis who comprise
the majority of the residents in that area. At the other end, the MQM (A)
is reported to be aligned with the Shia sectarian parties, a factor
corroborated by the fact that there has largely been no sectarian strife
in the areas of Karachi under the MQM (A) influence, which includes the
portion of district Central where the large Shia community of Rizvia
Colony is located.
The Mohajir community
comprises of refugees who moved to the newly created Pakistan after the
August 1947 partition of the Indian subcontinent. Most of these refugees
were natives of Bihar and Uttar Pradesh, which became part of the Indian
republic after the Partition.