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Awami National Party

The Awami National Party (ANP; Urdu: عوامی نيشنل پارٹی, Pashto: اولسي ملي ګوند; lit. People's National Party) is a Pashtun nationalist, secular and leftist political party in Pakistan.[4] The party was founded by Abdul Wali Khan in 1986 and its current president is Asfandyar Wali Khan, grandson of Bacha Khan, with Mian Iftikhar Hussain serving as the Secretary-General. Part of the PPP-led cabinet of the Pakistani government during 2008−13, ANP's political position is considered left-wing, advocating for secularism, public sector government, and social egalitarianism.[5]

Awami National Party
عوامی نيشنل پارٹی
عوامي ملي ګوند
Urdu nameعوامینيشنل پارٹی
AbbreviationANP
PresidentAsfandyar Wali Khan
General SecretaryMian Iftikhar Hussain
President Khyber PakhtunkhwaAimal Wali Khan
General Secretary Khyber PakhtunkhwaSardar Hussain Babak
FounderAbdul Wali Khan
Founded1986
Preceded byNational Awami Party (Wali)
HeadquartersBacha Khan Markaz, Peshawar
Student wingPakhtun Students Federation 
Youth wingNational Youth Organization
IdeologyPost-Marxism
Social democracy
Democratic socialism
Liberal socialism
Progressivism
Federalism
Pashtun nationalism[1][2]
(Liberal nationalism)
Secularism[2]
Political positionCentre-left[3] to left-wing[2]
National affiliationPONM
Pakistan Democratic Movement
International affiliationUNPO
Progressive Alliance
ColorsMahogany  
SloganPeace, Democracy, and Development
Senate
2 / 100
National AssemblyAssembly dissolved
KPK AssemblyAssembly dissolved
Balochistan Assembly Assembly dissolved
Election symbol
Lantern
Party flag
Website
Official website

ANP was the largest Pashtun nationalist party in Pakistan between 2008−2013 with influence lying in the Pashtun dominated areas in and around Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa. They governed the province from 2008–2013 but lost to Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf in the assembly election of 2013.

History Edit

Abdul Wali Khan's political career had been built on the tradition of intense Pashtun nationalism inherited from his father, Abdul Ghaffar Khan (Bacha Khan). Although it was formed after the partition of India, most of its leaders had favoured a united India, and had opposed the partition of India and the creation of Pakistan.[6] Most of the leaders were Indian National Congress right hands before the partition of India. Both men were opposed to the creation of Pakistan, and after the creation of Pakistan in 1947, they were imprisoned. In 1956 Wali Khan joined the National Awami Party (NAP), led by a charismatic Bengali socialist, Abdul Hamid Khan Bhashani. In 1965 the NAP split into two factions, with Wali Khan becoming president of the pro-Moscow faction.[6] The party's members participated in 1970 parliamentary elections through the Pakistan Peoples Party's platform and the National Awami Party, forming the largest socialist alliance with Zulfikar Ali Bhutto in 1970. However, the alliance fell apart and its members joined the Pakistan National Alliance.

In 1972 the party was strong enough to form coalition provincial governments, with its partner the Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam (JUI) in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan. These governments were short lived. Wali Khan was again jailed, and his party was barred from politics when the Supreme Court upheld the finding of President Bhutto that the NAP was conspiring against the state of Pakistan. General Zia-ul-Haq subsequently withdrew the charges against the NAP. Wali Khan was released, joined the National Democratic Party, and ultimately formed the Awami National Party. In the meantime, Prime Minister Bhutto was imprisoned and executed in April 1979.[6]

Formation and struggle for democracy Edit

The Awami National Party (Awami means "people's"), which depends on ethnic Pashtuns (Pukhtuns) of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (formerly NWFP) and northern Balochistan as its political base, was formed in 1986 by the merger of several left-leaning parties including the Awami Tehrik and the National Democratic Party.[6]

The National Democratic Party merged with several other progressive political and nationalist groups to form the Awami National Party. Wali Khan, the influential Pashtun and Soviet-backed leader, was elected as its first president and Sindhi socialist Rasul Bux Palejo was appointed its first secretary general. From 1986 to 1988, the ANP party was a member of the Movement for Restoration of Democracy.

Alliance with Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) Edit

Since its inception, the ANP has been an important ally of the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP). The party formed a coalition government with the PPP in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa, and in Sindh province and Islamabad for central government after the Pakistani parliamentary elections in 1988. This alliance, however, collapsed in April 1989 after differences cropped up between the two parties, after Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto ordered a military action that brutally failed. The Awami National Party later formed an alliance with the Pakistan Muslim League (PML) in early June 1989 which led to a formal split in the party with many activists allying with the PPP.

After the election of Nawaz Sharif in 1990, the ANP again formed a coalition with former rivals PML. This alliance proved longer lasting, surviving till 1998 when it collapsed over differences over the building of Kalabagh Dam and renaming the province NWFP to Pakhtunkhwa. It won six seats in the National Assembly in the 1990 elections. In the 1993 national elections, the party won three seats in the National Assembly.[6] It then joined the Grand Democratic Alliance, campaigning against the Sharif government's policies. After Nawaz Sharif's overthrow by Pervez Musharraf, the party stayed an active member of the Alliance for Restoration of Democracy, until the 2001 September 11 attacks in the United States, when it left the alliance over supporting NATO's ouster of the Taliban government. The party's reputation was damaged in this period following the arrest of former Federal Minister and senior party leader Azam Khan Hoti.[7]

In the 2002 elections the party struck up an alliance with the PPP. However, both parties were electorally routed in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa by the religion-political alliance Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal (MMA) riding on a wave of anti-American sentiment in Pakistan.[8]

In the 2008 parliamentary elections, the ANP dominated the far-right wing coalition, the MMA, a party formed by a coalition of Islamic movements in 2002. The ANP has also won provincial seats in Balochistan and in Sindh for the first time in 15 years. It formed a coalition government with the Pakistan People's Party in all three provinces. In Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, the ANP had its first chief minister since 1948.

The strongholds of the ANP are in the Pashtun dominated areas of Pakistan, particularly in the Valley of Peshawar area in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and it has traditionally dominated Charsadda, Mardan, Nowshera, Peshawar, and Swabi areas of central KPK. On the other hand, the city of Karachi in Sindh province hosts one of the largest Pashtun populations in the world, but the ANP only had 2 seats in 2011, whereas the number of Pashtuns present would predict them having "up to 25 seats".[9]

Recent events Edit

In May 2008, Asfandyar Wali Khan made an unannounced visit to the United States in which he and his delegate held high-level meetings with top U.S. officials. A source explained that "the delegation is here as part of a visitors programme that brings important people from other nations for meeting US civil and military officials and members of the civic society." This was Wali Khan's second such visit to the United States, a country where he has several relatives.[10]

In the last decade, hundreds of members of the ANP have been assassinated or became victims of target killings.[11][12][13] Most of the attacks occurred in the Karachi and Peshawar areas.[14][15] An ANP rally in Quetta was subject to a bomb blast on 13 July 2012. The blast killed six people and injured 12 others. It was speculated that a cycle parked behind the stage was the probable cause. The dead included two children as well.[16]

The party has also accused Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf chairman Imran Khan and of being complicit in the Taliban attacks.[17]

On 10 July 2018, during the 2018 Pakistani general election there was a suicide bombing attack on political rally of Awami National Party (ANP) in YakaToot neighborhood of Peshawar in which fourteen people were killed and sixty-five injured. Among the killed was ANP's Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Assembly candidate, Haroon Bilour. Bilour was son of Bashir Ahmad Bilour who was also killed in a suicide bombing attack in December 2012. Elections for Constituency PK-78 were postponed to an disclosed date by the Election Commission.[18]

Electoral history and performance
General elections Voting percentile % Voting turnout Seating graph Presiding chair of the party Parliamentary position
1988 2.1% #4 409,555
2 / 207
Abdul Wali Khan In alliance with PPP
1990 1.7% #5 356,160
6 / 207
Abdul Wali Khan | In Opposition
1993 1.7% #6 335,094
3 / 207
Abdul Wali Khan Remain in Neutrality
1997 1.9% #5 357,002
10 / 207
Abdul Wali Khan In Opposition
2002 1.0% #8
0 / 272
Abdul Wali Khan
2008 2.0% #6 700,479
10 / 272
Asfandyar Wali Khan In alliance with PPP
2013 #9 TBD TBD
1 / 272
Asfandyar Wali Khan In Opposition
2018 TBD TBD
1 / 272
Asfandyar Wali Khan

Ideology Edit

The party espouses a nonviolent approach to tackling extremism.[5] It promotes democratic socialism, secularism, economic egalitarianism, and Pashtun nationalism. The party has dense support among the Pashtun population in the country. Since 2000, its liberal socialism and pro-Pashtun philosophy has become the integral part of the party, advocating for the regional autonomy and increased Pashtun cultural expression. A frequent coalition partner in provincial politics, it was routed in the 2002 elections because of its opposition to the Taliban and support for the NATO-backed Karzai administration in neighboring Afghanistan.

It joined the opposition All Parties Democratic Movement, and along with other parties except the Pakistan Peoples Party resigned from Parliament in October 2007 in protest against the military regime of Pervez Musharraf. It was targeted in 2007 and 2008 by presumed supporters of the Taliban.[19][20] Despite the attacks, the party has advocated dialogue with moderate tribal elements to end the violence in the Government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Federally Administered Tribal Areas.

ANP leaders Edit

The Awami National Party is one of the few parties in Pakistan to hold a system of regular internal general elections every four-year period.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ "Awami National Party – Pashtun party seeks national role". Radio France Internationale. 29 April 2013.
  2. ^ a b c "Explainer: Pakistan's main political parties". Al-Jazeera. 6 May 2013.
  3. ^ "Elections in Pakistan". The Chronicle of Higher Education. 20 February 2008.
  4. ^ Lavoy, Peter R. (2009). Asymmetric Warfare in South Asia: The Causes and Consequences of the Kargil Conflict. Cambridge University Press. p. 291. ISBN 978-1-139-48282-0. ANP is Awami National Party, a Pashtun nationalist, secular party with socialist orientation
  5. ^ a b "Pakistan's 'Gandhi' party takes on Taliban, Al Qaeda". Christian Science Monitor. 5 May 2008.
  6. ^ a b c d e Peter R. Blood (April 1994). "Pakistan: A Country Study" (PDF). Library of Congress (U.S.).
  7. ^ Waseem Ahmad Shah (23 September 2001). "Govt-ANP deal seen behind Hoti's release". Dawn Wire Service.
  8. ^ Craig Baxter (2004). Pakistan on the Brink: Politics, Economics, and Society. Lexington Books. p. 113. ISBN 0-7391-0498-5.
  9. ^ Zia Ur Rehman (July 2011). "Demographic divide". The Friday Times. Karachi.
  10. ^ "US silent on visit of Asfandyar". Dawn. 10 May 2008.
  11. ^ Shaheryar Popalzai; Atika Rehman; Gibran Ashraf (8 July 2011). "Karachi violence, over 100 dead". The Tribune Express.
  12. ^ Maqbool Ahmed; Mansoor Khan (27 March 2015). "Troubled north-west comes to town". Herald.
  13. ^ "ANP, PTI lose highest number of MPs to terrorism". The News International. 24 April 2016.
  14. ^ "Ambushed: Police, ANP leader come under attack". The Express Tribune. 6 January 2013.
  15. ^ "Nine, including senior minister, killed in Pakistan suicide blast". Times Of India. 22 December 2012.
  16. ^ "Blast at ANP rally in Quetta: death toll rises to eight". Dawn. 13 July 2012.
  17. ^ "Imran Khan responsible for blasts: ANP". The News International. 30 September 2013.
  18. ^ "'Skip the meeting': Late ANP hopeful Haroon Bilour told son minutes before blast". www.geo.tv. Retrieved 11 July 2018.
  19. ^ "ANP MNA hands over resignation". Dawn. 24 September 2007.
  20. ^ "Secularists Face Tests In Northwest Pakistan". Washington Post. 1 March 2008.
  21. ^ "Malik Sartaj Wali Khan 1922-2014". The Friday Times (newspaper). 16 October 2020. Retrieved 18 April 2022.

External links Edit

  • Awami National Party Official Site

awami, national, party, confused, with, national, awami, party, awami, league, urdu, عوامی, نيشنل, پارٹی, pashto, اولسي, ملي, ګوند, people, national, party, pashtun, nationalist, secular, leftist, political, party, pakistan, party, founded, abdul, wali, khan, . Not to be confused with National Awami Party or Awami League The Awami National Party ANP Urdu عوامی نيشنل پارٹی Pashto اولسي ملي ګوند lit People s National Party is a Pashtun nationalist secular and leftist political party in Pakistan 4 The party was founded by Abdul Wali Khan in 1986 and its current president is Asfandyar Wali Khan grandson of Bacha Khan with Mian Iftikhar Hussain serving as the Secretary General Part of the PPP led cabinet of the Pakistani government during 2008 13 ANP s political position is considered left wing advocating for secularism public sector government and social egalitarianism 5 Awami National Party عوامی نيشنل پارٹی عوامي ملي ګوندUrdu nameعوامینيشنل پارٹیAbbreviationANPPresidentAsfandyar Wali KhanGeneral SecretaryMian Iftikhar HussainPresident Khyber PakhtunkhwaAimal Wali KhanGeneral Secretary Khyber PakhtunkhwaSardar Hussain BabakFounderAbdul Wali KhanFounded1986Preceded byNational Awami Party Wali HeadquartersBacha Khan Markaz PeshawarStudent wingPakhtun Students Federation Youth wingNational Youth OrganizationIdeologyPost MarxismSocial democracyDemocratic socialismLiberal socialismProgressivismFederalismPashtun nationalism 1 2 Liberal nationalism Secularism 2 Political positionCentre left 3 to left wing 2 National affiliationPONMPakistan Democratic MovementInternational affiliationUNPOProgressive AllianceColorsMahogany SloganPeace Democracy and DevelopmentSenate2 100National AssemblyAssembly dissolvedKPK AssemblyAssembly dissolvedBalochistan Assembly Assembly dissolvedElection symbolLanternParty flagWebsiteOfficial websitePolitics of PakistanPolitical partiesElectionsANP was the largest Pashtun nationalist party in Pakistan between 2008 2013 with influence lying in the Pashtun dominated areas in and around Khyber Pakhtunkhwa They governed the province from 2008 2013 but lost to Pakistan Tehreek e Insaf in the assembly election of 2013 Contents 1 History 1 1 Formation and struggle for democracy 1 2 Alliance with Pakistan Peoples Party PPP 1 3 Recent events 2 Ideology 3 ANP leaders 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksHistory EditAbdul Wali Khan s political career had been built on the tradition of intense Pashtun nationalism inherited from his father Abdul Ghaffar Khan Bacha Khan Although it was formed after the partition of India most of its leaders had favoured a united India and had opposed the partition of India and the creation of Pakistan 6 Most of the leaders were Indian National Congress right hands before the partition of India Both men were opposed to the creation of Pakistan and after the creation of Pakistan in 1947 they were imprisoned In 1956 Wali Khan joined the National Awami Party NAP led by a charismatic Bengali socialist Abdul Hamid Khan Bhashani In 1965 the NAP split into two factions with Wali Khan becoming president of the pro Moscow faction 6 The party s members participated in 1970 parliamentary elections through the Pakistan Peoples Party s platform and the National Awami Party forming the largest socialist alliance with Zulfikar Ali Bhutto in 1970 However the alliance fell apart and its members joined the Pakistan National Alliance In 1972 the party was strong enough to form coalition provincial governments with its partner the Jamiat Ulema e Islam JUI in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan These governments were short lived Wali Khan was again jailed and his party was barred from politics when the Supreme Court upheld the finding of President Bhutto that the NAP was conspiring against the state of Pakistan General Zia ul Haq subsequently withdrew the charges against the NAP Wali Khan was released joined the National Democratic Party and ultimately formed the Awami National Party In the meantime Prime Minister Bhutto was imprisoned and executed in April 1979 6 Formation and struggle for democracy Edit Main article Democracy in Pakistan The Awami National Party Awami means people s which depends on ethnic Pashtuns Pukhtuns of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa formerly NWFP and northern Balochistan as its political base was formed in 1986 by the merger of several left leaning parties including the Awami Tehrik and the National Democratic Party 6 The National Democratic Party merged with several other progressive political and nationalist groups to form the Awami National Party Wali Khan the influential Pashtun and Soviet backed leader was elected as its first president and Sindhi socialist Rasul Bux Palejo was appointed its first secretary general From 1986 to 1988 the ANP party was a member of the Movement for Restoration of Democracy Alliance with Pakistan Peoples Party PPP Edit Since its inception the ANP has been an important ally of the Pakistan Peoples Party PPP The party formed a coalition government with the PPP in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and in Sindh province and Islamabad for central government after the Pakistani parliamentary elections in 1988 This alliance however collapsed in April 1989 after differences cropped up between the two parties after Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto ordered a military action that brutally failed The Awami National Party later formed an alliance with the Pakistan Muslim League PML in early June 1989 which led to a formal split in the party with many activists allying with the PPP After the election of Nawaz Sharif in 1990 the ANP again formed a coalition with former rivals PML This alliance proved longer lasting surviving till 1998 when it collapsed over differences over the building of Kalabagh Dam and renaming the province NWFP to Pakhtunkhwa It won six seats in the National Assembly in the 1990 elections In the 1993 national elections the party won three seats in the National Assembly 6 It then joined the Grand Democratic Alliance campaigning against the Sharif government s policies After Nawaz Sharif s overthrow by Pervez Musharraf the party stayed an active member of the Alliance for Restoration of Democracy until the 2001 September 11 attacks in the United States when it left the alliance over supporting NATO s ouster of the Taliban government The party s reputation was damaged in this period following the arrest of former Federal Minister and senior party leader Azam Khan Hoti 7 In the 2002 elections the party struck up an alliance with the PPP However both parties were electorally routed in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa by the religion political alliance Muttahida Majlis e Amal MMA riding on a wave of anti American sentiment in Pakistan 8 In the 2008 parliamentary elections the ANP dominated the far right wing coalition the MMA a party formed by a coalition of Islamic movements in 2002 The ANP has also won provincial seats in Balochistan and in Sindh for the first time in 15 years It formed a coalition government with the Pakistan People s Party in all three provinces In Khyber Pakhtunkhwa the ANP had its first chief minister since 1948 The strongholds of the ANP are in the Pashtun dominated areas of Pakistan particularly in the Valley of Peshawar area in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and it has traditionally dominated Charsadda Mardan Nowshera Peshawar and Swabi areas of central KPK On the other hand the city of Karachi in Sindh province hosts one of the largest Pashtun populations in the world but the ANP only had 2 seats in 2011 whereas the number of Pashtuns present would predict them having up to 25 seats 9 Recent events Edit Main articles 2013 Pakistani general election and Pakistani Senate election 2015 In May 2008 Asfandyar Wali Khan made an unannounced visit to the United States in which he and his delegate held high level meetings with top U S officials A source explained that the delegation is here as part of a visitors programme that brings important people from other nations for meeting US civil and military officials and members of the civic society This was Wali Khan s second such visit to the United States a country where he has several relatives 10 In the last decade hundreds of members of the ANP have been assassinated or became victims of target killings 11 12 13 Most of the attacks occurred in the Karachi and Peshawar areas 14 15 An ANP rally in Quetta was subject to a bomb blast on 13 July 2012 The blast killed six people and injured 12 others It was speculated that a cycle parked behind the stage was the probable cause The dead included two children as well 16 The party has also accused Pakistan Tehreek e Insaf chairman Imran Khan and of being complicit in the Taliban attacks 17 On 10 July 2018 during the 2018 Pakistani general election there was a suicide bombing attack on political rally of Awami National Party ANP in YakaToot neighborhood of Peshawar in which fourteen people were killed and sixty five injured Among the killed was ANP s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Assembly candidate Haroon Bilour Bilour was son of Bashir Ahmad Bilour who was also killed in a suicide bombing attack in December 2012 Elections for Constituency PK 78 were postponed to an disclosed date by the Election Commission 18 Electoral history and performance General elections Voting percentile Voting turnout Seating graph Presiding chair of the party Parliamentary position1988 2 1 4 409 555 2 207 Abdul Wali Khan In alliance with PPP1990 1 7 5 356 160 6 207 Abdul Wali Khan In Opposition1993 1 7 6 335 094 3 207 Abdul Wali Khan Remain in Neutrality1997 1 9 5 357 002 10 207 Abdul Wali Khan In Opposition2002 1 0 8 0 272 Abdul Wali Khan 2008 2 0 6 700 479 10 272 Asfandyar Wali Khan In alliance with PPP2013 9 TBD TBD 1 272 Asfandyar Wali Khan In Opposition2018 TBD TBD 1 272 Asfandyar Wali Khan Ideology EditThe party espouses a nonviolent approach to tackling extremism 5 It promotes democratic socialism secularism economic egalitarianism and Pashtun nationalism The party has dense support among the Pashtun population in the country Since 2000 its liberal socialism and pro Pashtun philosophy has become the integral part of the party advocating for the regional autonomy and increased Pashtun cultural expression A frequent coalition partner in provincial politics it was routed in the 2002 elections because of its opposition to the Taliban and support for the NATO backed Karzai administration in neighboring Afghanistan It joined the opposition All Parties Democratic Movement and along with other parties except the Pakistan Peoples Party resigned from Parliament in October 2007 in protest against the military regime of Pervez Musharraf It was targeted in 2007 and 2008 by presumed supporters of the Taliban 19 20 Despite the attacks the party has advocated dialogue with moderate tribal elements to end the violence in the Government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Federally Administered Tribal Areas ANP leaders EditThe Awami National Party is one of the few parties in Pakistan to hold a system of regular internal general elections every four year period Presidents 1986 1990 Abdul Wali Khan 1991 1999 Ajmal Khattak 1999 2002 Asfandyar Wali Khan 2002 2003 Ehsan Wyne 2003 present Asfandyar Wali Khan Others Afzal Khan Lala Ghulam Ahmad Bilour Shahi Sayed Provincial President ANP Sindh Bashir Ahmad Bilour Ameer Haider Khan Hoti Baz Muhammad Khan Malik Sirtaj Khan 21 Haji Muhammad Adeel Qazi Anwar Mian Iftikhar Hussain Zahid Khan Aimal Wali KhanSee also EditList of political parties in Pakistan Kalabagh Dam Khan Abdul Jabbar Khan Bahram Khan familyReferences Edit Awami National Party Pashtun party seeks national role Radio France Internationale 29 April 2013 a b c Explainer Pakistan s main political parties Al Jazeera 6 May 2013 Elections in Pakistan The Chronicle of Higher Education 20 February 2008 Lavoy Peter R 2009 Asymmetric Warfare in South Asia The Causes and Consequences of the Kargil Conflict Cambridge University Press p 291 ISBN 978 1 139 48282 0 ANP is Awami National Party a Pashtun nationalist secular party with socialist orientation a b Pakistan s Gandhi party takes on Taliban Al Qaeda Christian Science Monitor 5 May 2008 a b c d e Peter R Blood April 1994 Pakistan A Country Study PDF Library of Congress U S Waseem Ahmad Shah 23 September 2001 Govt ANP deal seen behind Hoti s release Dawn Wire Service Craig Baxter 2004 Pakistan on the Brink Politics Economics and Society Lexington Books p 113 ISBN 0 7391 0498 5 Zia Ur Rehman July 2011 Demographic divide The Friday Times Karachi US silent on visit of Asfandyar Dawn 10 May 2008 Shaheryar Popalzai Atika Rehman Gibran Ashraf 8 July 2011 Karachi violence over 100 dead The Tribune Express Maqbool Ahmed Mansoor Khan 27 March 2015 Troubled north west comes to town Herald ANP PTI lose highest number of MPs to terrorism The News International 24 April 2016 Ambushed Police ANP leader come under attack The Express Tribune 6 January 2013 Nine including senior minister killed in Pakistan suicide blast Times Of India 22 December 2012 Blast at ANP rally in Quetta death toll rises to eight Dawn 13 July 2012 Imran Khan responsible for blasts ANP The News International 30 September 2013 Skip the meeting Late ANP hopeful Haroon Bilour told son minutes before blast www geo tv Retrieved 11 July 2018 ANP MNA hands over resignation Dawn 24 September 2007 Secularists Face Tests In Northwest Pakistan Washington Post 1 March 2008 Malik Sartaj Wali Khan 1922 2014 The Friday Times newspaper 16 October 2020 Retrieved 18 April 2022 External links EditAwami National Party Official Site Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Awami National Party amp oldid 1170393337, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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