The least the government could have done was to manage PSO as would a responsible shareholder, instead of behaving like a populist government looking for a scapegoat. The PSO management, far from being responsible for the crisis, had been warning the government for months of an impending petrol shortage in the country. Meanwhile, they were being hampered by Finance Minister Ishaq Dar’s obsessive need to meet his foreign exchange reserves targets, no matter what the cost to the economy. Mr Dar prevented PSO from buying dollars to pay its international suppliers in December because that would have lowered the foreign exchange reserves. Meanwhile, his cabinet colleague Water and Power Minister Khawaja Asif has been unable to do much about the massive expansion of electricity theft, which is what precipitated the financial crunch at PSO that ultimately caused the petrol crisis. Yet even as hardworking employees of PSO — who had the foresight to warn of the problem — are being removed from their positions, the cabinet ministers most directly responsible for the affair are being absolved of any guilt. How does the Nawaz Administration expect us to believe its promises of competent government when it so cynically avoids accountability for its friends?
Published in The Express Tribune, February 13th, 2015.
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