Ahsan Iqbal tipped to replace Pervaiz Rashid as information minister

'Iqbal can be given additional charge as information minister pending completion of 'newsgate' inquiry'


Hasnaat Mailk October 30, 2016
PHOTO: ONLINE

The federal government is considering to give additional charge of Information Ministry to Ahsan Iqbal, who is already serving as the federation's Minister for Planing and Development.

Rashid a scapegoat to save skins of ‘royal’ Sharifs', says Imran

Sources in PM secretariat told The Express Tribune that the federal government is considering Ahsan Iqbal's nomination for the Information Ministry. A senior government official has also confirmed the report.

A PML-N leader also corroborated the report, saying Ahsan Iqbal can be given additional charge for the said ministry pending completion of 'newsgate' inquiry involving ex-information minister Rashid.

Buckling under relentless pressure, the government on Saturday sent its information minister packing after preliminary investigations established a ‘lapse’ on his part vis-à-vis a ‘planted news story’ about a top level huddle on national security.

Tellingly, Rashid’s sacking came barely 48 hours after an unusual meeting of senior government functionaries with army chief General Raheel Sharif at the Army House.

Information minister steps down after being identified as leak in 'planted' story

The government refuted the story published in English-language daily Dawn on October 6 as ‘false and fabricated’ not once, not twice but thrice. The repeated denials, however, failed to satisfy the military which called for unmasking those who had planted the story.

“Evidence available so far points to a lapse on part of the information minister, who has been directed to step down from office to enable holding of an independent and detailed inquiry,” says a statement issued by the prime minister’s office.

“The planted story related to the NSC [National Security Committee] and NAP [National Action Plan] meetings published in daily Dawn on 6th October was a breach of national security,” it adds.

The government will also form an inquiry committee, comprising senior officers of the Inter-Services Intelligence, Military Intelligence and Intelligence Bureau, to “clearly apportion blame, identify interests and motives and expose all those responsible for this episode for stern action in the national interest”.

Heads start rolling over ‘planted story’

Following Rashid’s sacking, reports also swirled through the media that Principal Information Officer Rao Tehsin Ali Khan has also been removed from his office and made officer on special duty (OSD). There was no official confirmation, though.

The interior minister, who is looking into the matter on the instructions of Premier Sharif, is expected to brief the media today [Sunday] where he might expose who else was behind this ‘deliberate leak’.

In the Dawn story, reported by Cyril Almeida on the authority of unnamed sources, the civilian government warned the military leadership in the high-level huddle of Pakistan’s increasing international isolation for its failure to act against non-state actors.

The story created an impression that the security establishment was reluctant to take action against the non-state actors, particularly those hostile towards India.

Dawn’s ‘fabricated’ story breached national security, says army

In its first formal reaction on October 14, the top military commanders voiced serious concern over the ‘feeding of [the] false and fabricated news story’, calling it a ‘breach of national security’.

Premier Nawaz Sharif had tasked the interior minister with holding an inquiry into the matter. The interior minister had promised to complete the investigation within three or four days. But that didn’t happen, though the names of some officials and reporter Almeida were put on the exit control list until the completion of the inquiry. Almeida’s name was later taken off the list.

It is not immediately clear whether the military would accept the sacking of the information minister as security sources want to try those responsible for ‘planting’ the story under the Army Act – something the civilian government may not agree to.

COMMENTS (2)

Ranjha | 7 years ago | Reply @Parvez: Good pun
Parvez | 7 years ago | Reply Good choice.....he'll he able to work under Marium.
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