In a rare move, Leader of the House Yousaf Raza Gilani earlier met with leaders from the allied parties and left the house without making a policy statement over the gas crisis which has sparked violent countrywide protests.
The prime minister went up to the seat of Asfandyar Wali Khan, chief of the Awami National Party, where Pakistan Muslim League-Quaid leader Chaudhry Pervaiz Elahi and MQM legislator Haider Abbas Rizvi were also present. After a brief chit-chat with them, the prime minister left the house.
PML-N lawmakers Chaudhry Barjees Tahir, Malik Abrar, Tehmina Daultana and Mehtab Abbasi came down hard on the government for its ‘failure to overcome the gas crisis.’
They called upon the government to concede its failure, step down and call fresh parliamentary elections before a “dictator steps in or the Supreme Court hands down a verdict.”
In response, Minister for Water and Power Naveed Qamar acknowledged the gravity of the situation. He promised that the situation would improve within a ‘few days’. But he didn’t say how his ministry would bridge the two billion cubic feet gap in demand and supply of gas.
Qamar requested the opposition to not politicise the issue and instead “work hand in hand with the government to overcome this crisis.”
But PML-N legislator Malik Abrar shot back: “You should resign if you do not have a solution. We don’t want to share the blame for your negligence.”
At this moment, Mehtab Abbasi stepped in – announcing a walkout from the house. “We don’t want to topple the government but the people do,” he asserted. He also criticised the prime minister for leaving the house without making a policy statement on the issue.
MQM legislator Syed Asif Husnain complained to Chairman Nawab Yousaf Talpur that the government had not allowed his party to move a call attention notice to avoid embarrassment.
His party’s lawmakers, later, walked out from the proceedings to protest the government’s ‘non-serious attitude.’
Since neither the prime minister nor the petroleum minister was in the house, Religious Affairs Minister Khursheed Shah stood up to respond to the MQM’s call attention notice. The party had sought a government justification for the 14 per cent increase in CNG prices.
“Every year, the country faces gas shortage but this time around protests are being engineered,” Shah said and described MQM’s walkout as a move to gain political mileage out of the issue.
Justifying the hike in CNG prices, Shah said, “We have not increased tariff for domestic consumers.”
Published in The Express Tribune, January 3rd, 2012.
COMMENTS (4)
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When these failed politician will realized time for walkout is useless, actually they are among who made these failed policies and just trying to runaway from it. Instead they should tries to make motion by moving people from both sides and pass resolution or stop the price hikes!
Incompetency at its best. Its like a taxi driver has been put in charge of flying a plane
PPP is a sham.
PPP government has lost all credibility that it can resolve problems facing this country. Previously their inability was blamed on their terms being cut short using constitutional or other measures, amply helped by PPP government's at that time.
This time I want them to complete their term. Just so that this so called "peoples" party are exposed to the people as shallow, incompetent and corrupt individuals whose primary goal is self enrichment, using the Bhutto brand. So once and for all, this myth of PPP government caring for common man is laid to rest. Let this government complete its term.
If they had any shame, they would hold up their hands and say, running a country is beyond us and we give up.
Now, MQM is playing an interesting game by joining boycott. It knows that industry is suffering. And if industry suffers in Karachi, so do the people of Karachi, its vote bank. This might be the time when MQM is also kicked out of power.
Again, let this farce of a government complete its term.