Tirah notification a ‘warrant for confrontation’: K-P CM

Sohail Afridi says he will convene a jirga if alleged notice on Tirah Valley evacuation is not withdrawn or apologised

Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa Chief Minister Sohail Afridi addresses party workers at the Baizai Bypass in Malakand. SCREENGRAB

PESHAWAR:

Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa Chief Minister Sohail Afridi on Sunday warned that a federal notification regarding Tirah Valley could lead to confrontation between the provincial government and state institutions, saying he would convene a Pashtun jirga if the notification was not withdrawn and an apology issued.

Addressing a rally in Mingora, he rejected the alleged notification’s claim that residents of Tirah Valley had migrated voluntarily. He said a jirga of the Afridi tribe would be convened to determine whether the displacement was forced or voluntary.

“If the claim is proven false, I will personally take my people back to Tirah, God willing,” he said, adding that if the issue remained unresolved, he would later convene a jirga of the entire Pashtun nation.

Afridi also criticised individuals holding press conferences in Peshawar, allegedly from Islamabad, who had declared his appointment as chief minister “unacceptable”. He asserted that no institution had the authority to interfere in politics or object to his appointment. “My leader gave me this position, and no one has the right to object,” he said.

The chief minister claimed that multiple attempts had been made to prevent him from assuming office, including efforts to build political narratives against him and allegations linking him to terrorism.

“When all these failed, three options were presented: governor’s rule, my disqualification, or regime change. When those failed, the final option was to kill me,” he alleged.

Referring to his early days in office, he said he had attended funerals of army and Frontier Corps personnel after receiving official messages. However, he claimed that such invitations later stopped, alleging the move was intended to damage Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf’s image.

Criticising the federal notification, Afridi said it amounted to a “warrant for confrontation” and had eroded whatever limited trust remained between the provincial government and institutions.

He said all future dealings with the federal government would be conducted with documented evidence to prevent decisions made “behind closed doors” from being imposed later. “We will not accept any plan made behind closed doors,” he said. “We rebel against such decisions — we are all rebels.”

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