Harman Patil (Editor)

Aam Aadmi Party (Pakistan)

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Leader
  
Arslan Ul Mulk

Colours
  
White and green

Ideology
  
Anti-corruption


Founded
  
January 2014 (renaming)

Headquarters
  
Ghakhar Mandi City, Gujranwala.

Aam Aadmi Party (Urdu: عام آدمی پارٹی‎; sometimes spelled Amm Admi Party) is a Pakistani political party that was formerly known as the Pakistan Muhajir League until its name-change on 1 January 2014. The change of name mirrored the name chosen a few weeks earlier for a party in India.

The party is led by Arslan Ul Mulk, a human rights activist from Gujranwala, who has been in charge since 2011. It aims to campaign on issues relating to imprisonment and police torture. Mulk said it would strive to make Pakistan a country as dreamt of by its founder, Mohammed Ali Jinnah.

Briefly detained on 3 February 2014 under the Maintenance of Public Order Ordinance, Mulk embarked on a series of Hunger Strike Camps in various cities across Pakistan. Ever since then Mulk has been booked and detained several times by Police on charges related to political activism.Arslan Ul Mulk however faces a determined opposition which sees him as a newcomer in an already crowded field of Pakistani Politics unlike Arvind Kejriwal of Indian AAP,who drew his fame from his mentor Anna Hazare who has had led a prolonged struggle against corruption.

Ideology

Mulk says they have a 54-point agenda that includes the elimination of hereditary politics, restoration of self-esteem of the common man, omission of word impunity from the country through legislation and getting rid of corruption

In April 2014, Adnan Randhawa, a former civil servant and anti-corruption activist from Burewala, formed another party bearing a similar name, being the Aam Aadmi Party of Pakistan (AAPP). Randhawa had previously been involved with Imran Khan's Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf but became disillusioned, especially because he thought it was moving to the right of the political spectrum and was increasingly dominated by the very ruling elite that it had set out to challenge. According to The Times of India, Randhawa says his AAPP "lays greater emphasis on national rejuvenation" than Mulk's AAP and it has a wider focus on social issues such as poverty.

References

Aam Aadmi Party (Pakistan) Wikipedia