Aamir Liaquat Hussain: Pakistan's shock televangelist dies at 50

 

             

                                Aamir Liaquat Hussain, seen here in Karachi during the 2018 election campaign, was 50   One of Pakistan's most prominent and contentious TV hosts, Aamir Liaquat Hussain, has died aged 50 after being unconscious at home in Karachi.    The anchor to the hospital but pronounced dead on arrival. A post-mortem exam is being carried out.


Aamir Liaquat Hussain


Aamir Liaquat Hussain, seen here in Karachi during the 2018 election campaign, was 50


One of Pakistan's most prominent and contentious TV hosts, Aamir Liaquat Hussain, has died aged 50 after being unconscious at home in Karachi.


The anchor to the hospital but pronounced dead on arrival. A post-mortem exam is being carried out.


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Aamir Liaquat Hussain switched from televangelism to politics, becoming an MP for Imran Khan's PTI party.


His career controversy - he gave babies to childless couples on TV and for hate speech.


The outspoken anchor's personal life was public fodder, too, often fuelled by his activities on social media.


In the last chapter of his life, he married for the third time, but it ended within months. His 18-year-old bride Dania Shah filed for divorce in May, accusing him of domestic abuse and being a drug addict.


Hussain released a video calling the marriage a "fiasco" and dismissing the allegations as fake news - but he also referred to the things said about him on social media after all he had done for Pakistan and vowed to leave the country.


Aamir Liaquat Hussain for his TV giveaways


Aamir Liaquat Hussain, who worked for many of Pakistan's leading media houses over his career, was popular with a section of the population, but many others found him divisive.


An eloquent speaker and a great showman who guaranteed ratings, his broadcasts were well scripted and included religious sermons - as well as frequent abuse.


There were regular complaints from those whom the televangelist named and shamed on his shows. He would accuse people of blasphemy, treason, or fornication.


In September 2008, he dedicated an entire program to exploring the beliefs of the Ahmadis, a sect who identify themselves as Muslim and follow the teachings of the Koran but orthodox Muslims as heretical.


Two scholars said that anyone associated with false prophets was "worthy of murder." Within 24 hours of the broadcast, a prominent member of the Ahmadi community dead in the small town of Mirpur Khas in Sindh province.


The outspoken anchor will also for sexist remarks about liberal women in Pakistan - often artists, authors, or human rights activists.


Quiz shows and product giveaways - cars, motorbikes, and household electronics - were a prominent feature of his shows, and in 2013, even abandoned babies.


He insisted at the time that the move to give infants a chance at a better life was not an attempt to boost his ratings.


"We were already top of the ratings before we gave away a baby. We took these children from the garbage, from the trash, and delivered them to the needy people," Hussain said on his website, where he described himself as "a legend."


Symbol of hypocrisy and division


Abid Hussain, BBC Urdu, Islamabad


Aamir Liaquat Hussain was a larger-than-life figure who dominated the public consciousness for two decades as an entertainment icon and the definitive symbol of modern Pakistani society's hypocrisy and divisions.


He found himself in the right place at the right time, at the intersection of religion, politics, and showbiz. The televangelist was a game show host, a politician, an aspiring actor, a model, and a brand ambassador. He also had his clothing label.


His antics on his game show evoked admiration and disgust in equal measure. He'd hand out prizes but was at ease delivering religious fatwas and issuing sometimes inciteful, sometimes false statements against journalists and others. 

News of his death spread like wildfire - besides initial shock, the reaction was as divided as it had been to him while he was alive. Alongside condolences from political leaders, there was an outpouring of grief from thousands of his followers. But many Pakistanis aren't ready to refrain from speaking ill of the dead and reminded others of his controversial statements and lurid past.


The TV host was a member of parliament from 2002 until 2008 when he the MQM party. He served as the minister of state for religious affairs from 2004 to 2007 under then-president Pervez Musharraf.


As a politician, he is in several rows. On one occasion, he was taken hostage by students angry at his work criticizing suicide bombings.


On another occasion, he declared British-Indian novelist Salman Rushdi "worthy of death" - comments that forced him to resign from parliament.


In 2018 he returned to politics again, joining the Pakistan Tehrik-e-Insaf (PTI) party and becoming a member of the National Assembly again the following year.



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