That Chaudhry Nisar is the 'odd man out' in the present scheme of things is a fact. To take another recent example, Chaudhry Nisar held one of his by now famous press conferences in the wake of the ISPR DG's tweet rejecting the notification issued by the Prime Minister's office regarding the Dawn leaks affair. The investigation report on which the notification was based is still to see the light of day. The interior minister tried a novel method of damage control by stating that any notification based on the report should only have been issued by the interior ministry, not the Prime Minister's office. So we were treated to the spectacle of the military rejecting the notification as being not entirely in conformity with the findings/recommendations of the report, while the government's own interior minister was 'rejecting' it on procedural grounds. Chaudhry Nisar had also criticised the resort to tweets as a method of communication between institutions. Yet his advice fell on deaf ears apparently as far as Maryam Nawaz is concerned. Reacting to media reports that Chaudhry Nisar, Ishaq Dar and Shahbaz Sharif had (once again) been asked to speak to the brass over the Dawn leaks notification, Maryam Nawaz tweeted that no one had been tasked to do anything. Maryam's refutation of the matter may have been prompted by embarrassment, but this would not be the first time this trio from amongst the PML-N leadership had been asked to pull the government's chestnuts out of the fire vis-à-vis relations with the military. This perhaps is the area of greatest utility as far as retaining Chaudhry Nisar on such an important ministry is concerned. Otherwise he has failed to discharge his duties as interior minister satisfactorily and in line with the National Action Plan. Given his reputed closeness to military circles, it should not surprise anyone that Chaudhry Nisar is likely to be around as long as a PML-N government is in power, even if, more often than not, he appears to be out of sync with his colleagues, sometimes even the prime minister and the cabinet. In these circumstances, the 'odd man out' seems set to prevail.
Copyright Business Recorder, 2017