If you disagree with quota system in any form, why do you keep mentioning that it only helps waderas? As far as you are concerned, wadera or poor sindhi, it's all the same. If you would be okay with it only helping poor Sindhis, why do you keep putting in doubt that they need helping?.
The Sindhis as a group are not oppressed by any means and even if they are they are oppressed by fellow Sindhis. Problem is the complexity of the issue which is hard to explain. To solve the problems in interior sindh you need land reforms and destroying the hold of waderas. Now while the quota system or anything of that sort sounds good but the situation in Sindh (and Punjab) is too complex for it to be ever a solution. It may have worked elsewhere but not in Pakistan.
In interior Sindh, the inequality is greater than probably any region in the country. The Haris are literally slaves of the waderas for all intents and purposes. If any government was actually sincere they wouldnt bother with introducing the quota system at a point where any oppressed poor Sindhi would not go to primary school and learn to read and write let alone benefit from a law which is farcical. If you want to improve the conditions of the poor masses in Sindh and Punjab then you need land reforms like India had after partition not some masala quota law for populist appeal and votes.
I would be happy if it actually helped the particular group. But I cant put my head in the sand and praise some cosmetic law which only serves to strengthen the hold of the same groups of people who have oppressed the poor people of this country and leeched it since its inception. It may sound good to outsiders but the reality is that the intention of it was never to help the poor Sindhis. Problem in your case is that you do not know ground realities. A poor Sindhi would rarely be applying for jobs/opportunities in Karachi in the first place so the idea of them benefitting as a group makes no sense. It only serves the offspring of waderas who have grown up in Karachi all their life but use their family addresses and hence get free passes in high position.
40 years have passed and there has been no positive development as far as the position of poor rural Sindhis is concerned. Infact its gotten better. At some point you have to take stock of reality. The law was designed to help the landowners and it has done an absolutely unbelievable job of that. They use the bait of jobs to win elections and get ministries and whatnot.
The quota system has succeeded in every respect for what it was meant to do and has alienated a large group of people too and given rise to menace of ethnic parties. And the shame here is that the rise of such a party is fully justified.
Btw even IK said recently that the quota system is a gross injustice.
I know where you are coming from and why it may sound good but the reality is different.
In any case the aim should be to improve and increase opportunties in interior Sindh and elsewhere.
What other groups in Pakistan need it? If there are, no doubt it needs to exist in other provinces too.
Seraikis, Hazaras etc etc. by same token,
That is the nature of most political decisions. They are presented as a help for the citizen but only for the votes, in practice they help the decision-makers. That doesn't mean that the principle that there need to be quotas for rural sindhis is wrong.
It is. The quota for rural Sindhis is 60%.
By all estimates Karachi has more population than whole of interior Sindh but expressly for this reason a cencus has not been conducted since 1998 so that the numbers dont reflect that.
There may be individuals who are actually less privileged than even rural Sindhis but affirmative action/quota is about improvement on the level of whole populations, not individuals, and at a macro-demographic level, Urdu-speaking people (for the same income) are more privileged than Sindhis. There should still be affirmative action based on income (for example more scholarships) but society benefits a lot more from helping a poor Sindhi who is then going to use his education, wealth or power to improve the future of whole areas (instead of just their own self and their children)
An actual oppressed poor Sindhi who would benefit from the quota system (no such thing exists) would definitely not be residing in interior sindh anyways as the opportunities are there.
The simple fact is that its in the interest of the landowners to keep on oppressing the poor and keeping them illiterate so the likelihood of that happening is low.