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Cracks in PTI widen

M. Sarmad

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Cracks in PTI widen
ZULFIQAR ALI

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PESHAWAR: Three more MPAs of the ruling Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf, including the deputy speaker, on Wednesday joined the party’s dissidents in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Assembly amid the provincial government’s unsuccessful attempts to pacify the rebellious lawmakers.

MPA Qurban Ali Khan, who leads the PTI dissidents, claimed that three more members of the party had joined the bloc on Wednesday taking its strength to 17.

“Three more MPAs will join the bloc in the next two days,” he told Dawn.

In the day, the disgruntled MPAs from Peshawar, Swat, Kohat, Hangu and other areas held a meeting at the MPAs Hostel.

Noted among them were Ziaullah Bangash, Mahmood Jan, Javed Nasim, Dr Amjad, Gul Sahib Khan Khattak, Arbab Jehandad and Shah Faisal.

Significantly, Deputy Speaker Imtiaz Shahid, who belongs to Kohat district, has also joined the group. Experts say the turmoil within PTI could land Chief Minister Pervez Khattak and his coalition government in trouble.

Jamaat-i-Islami and Awami Jamhoori Ittehad Pakistan with eight and five MPAs respectively are coalition partners of the PTI in the province.

Qurban Ali Khan claimed four women MPAs were among the dissidents, who enjoyed the support of many party MNAs.

He said the provincial ministers and party leaders had been trying to meet dissidents since Tuesday but the meeting didn’t take place due to the latter’s refusal.

“Different people have been approaching us since Tuesday to resolve issues through dialogue but we have refused,” he said, adding dissidents would speak to the party chairman only regarding issues.

“We will not listen to anyone except Imran Khan,” he said, adding that the charge sheet against ministers and dishonest figures of the party would be presented to the party head.

Mr Qurban said before meeting Imran Khan, dissidents who had formed a bloc, would address a news conference in Peshawar.

He said the dissidents had advised the provincial government to act in line with the PTI manifesto and guidelines, but nobody paid attention.

The dissidents’ leader said the PTI vision and programme in health, education and local government hadn’t been followed and that key social sector portfolios had been given to the party’s coalition partners.

“Our mission is to save PTI and not to secure portfolios or other coveted positions,” he said.

Special assistant to the chief minister Syed Mohammad Ishtiaq, who is the PTI provincial information secretary, played down the dissident crisis in the party.

Talking to Dawn on Wednesday evening, he said he had met members of the dissident bloc and offered them the resolution of their grievances through negotiation.

“Differences among our members are natural and government is ready to address their genuine problems,” he said.

The special assistant said the disgruntled lawmakers were asked to express their reservations and demands during the meeting.

Cracks in PTI widen - DAWN.COM
 
This is true democracy unlike in other Parties of Pakistan........Hats off to Imran Khan:lol:
 
Rumors are these people are not happy with upcoming reshuffling in KP cabinet and are trying to put pressure on party. Lets see.

This is true democracy unlike in other Parties of Pakistan........Hats off to Imran Khan:lol:


Yes it is, if they have genuine problems then they have the right to protest by any means possible and guess what, party leadership will hear them and do whatever possible to fulfill their genuine problems. You don't need to worry my dear troll..
 
Analysis: Trouble brewing within PTI in KP
ISMAIL KHAN
Updated 2014-04-03 10:27:24
Eleven months in power, the ruling Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa is already in trouble.

The number of PTI dissident members in the provincial assembly has now risen to 20 — with more coming to join the flock — and there is a good number of party parliamentarians in the National Assembly who also have issues with KP Chief Minister Pervez Khattak.

It is said that while the PTI’s dissident provincial lawmakers have issues with the party’s central leadership over recent inductions in the cabinet, those from the National Assembly lambaste Khattak for his attitude towards them.

The dissident provincial lawmakers wouldn’t speak to Khattak and wanted to directly speak to PTI supremo Imran Khan to find out, in the words of one key dissident member, who makes decisions in the party.

And the dissident federal legislators — now believed to be 14 in number — have already spoken to Khan. They don’t want to have anything to do with the chief minister. Their patience with the chief minister has run out, a party lawmaker in the National Assembly confided. They may also form a forward bloc and the party chairman knows it, the lawmaker said.

There were troubles within the party right from the word go, when the first batch of ministers took the oath in June last year. There were loud grumblings amongst the unhappy lot, a large number of ministerial hopefuls.

Khattak moved quickly to induct an unprecedented number of advisers, special assistants and parliamentary secretaries and chairmen of district development advisory committees to stamp out dissent.

Soon enough, the ridiculously large number of parliamentary committees posed another challenge. The government could not find enough members available with it to lead the many standing committees. So some of the parliamentary secretaries had to be shunted out to make room for chairmen of the standing committees. But this did not solve the problem.

Things began to heat up again as speculation of a reshuffle in the cabinet started doing the rounds, apparently citing performance as the key factor.

But while the replacement of the minister for health did generate some controversy, it was the induction of new ministers that caused a furore amongst those waiting on the sidelines, hoping to find a berth in the cabinet.

If the speculation was not enough, coming soon on the heels of a tug-of-war between the chief minister and Khan-backed chief secretary in KP were also rumours that Khattak is unhappy with direct interference from influential party figures in Islamabad.

There was speculation, never convincingly laid to rest, that the chief minister had formed his own group of loyalists within the party to forestall any attempt at dislodging him. Media reports to the effect were never contradicted.

Understandably, the party is new to power politics and most of its members, save a few, with ambitions and expectations are new to assemblies.

There have already been questions about discipline, its enforcement and the way the party is run. Party leaders do not remember when their central executive council last met. Key policy decisions are taken in the core committee, whose number has increased from 15 to 37.

How did this happen, no one has a clue. While the core committee is supposed to be elected by secret ballot, it has expanded by leaps and bounds without the party’s constitutional sanction.

But when it comes to nominations, they are done by the party chief Khan who, according to a senior party leader, was mandated by the last central executive council meeting to make nominations when and where necessary, pending next party elections. The leader did not remember the meeting’s date.

As for those nominated to the KP cabinet, party leaders insist, the matter was decided between Khan and Khattak and the influential figures in Islamabad had nothing to do with it.

Khattak on his part has told those agitating against the latest induction that the decisions to the effect were taken at the top by Khan himself. And this is why, say the dissidents, they want to meet the chairman to clear the air.

Surprisingly, however, with so much happening with the PTI in KP, the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz — which can cause an upset and bring down Khan’s government — is watching silently, refusing to be drawn into the conflict.

Given the number of PTI-led coalition members and the emergence of the dissident group, Khan’s government in KP is precariously placed.

Even without the dissident group, the PML-N, had it really wanted to, could have easily manoeuvred a coup by weaning away the Swabi group, whose leader Shahram Tarakai has, not surprisingly, been made a senior minister and given a key portfolio of health in the latest reshuffle.

The Jamiat Ulema-i-Islam-Fazl, together with Sherpao’s Qaumi Watan Party and a bunch of other parties in the KP Assembly, is ever keen and ready to pull the rug from under the PTI feet.

But the PML-N, at least for now, is not willing to take the bait. KP is not an easy province to govern, given the state of security in the violence-hit region, but there is more to it.

The PML-N would like to see the PTI government die its own slow death in five years — like its two immediate predecessors — rather than become a pain in the neck in its citadel of Lahore.
 
Rumors are these people are not happy with upcoming reshuffling in KP cabinet and are trying to put pressure on party. Lets see.




Yes it is, if they have genuine problems then they have the right to protest by any means possible and guess what, party leadership will hear them and do whatever possible to fulfill their genuine problems. You don't need to worry my dear troll..

Why didn't party leadership listen them earlier, why they forced to go Public in the first place......there is something terribly wrong in PTI at the moment and your leadership simply have no clue.

Analysis: Trouble brewing within PTI in KP
ISMAIL KHAN
Updated 2014-04-03 10:27:24
Eleven months in power, the ruling Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa is already in trouble.

Surprisingly, however, with so much happening with the PTI in KP, the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz — which can cause an upset and bring down Khan’s government — is watching silently, refusing to be drawn into the conflict.

Given the number of PTI-led coalition members and the emergence of the dissident group, Khan’s government in KP is precariously placed.

Even without the dissident group, the PML-N, had it really wanted to, could have easily manoeuvred a coup by weaning away the Swabi group, whose leader Shahram Tarakai has, not surprisingly, been made a senior minister and given a key portfolio of health in the latest reshuffle.

The Jamiat Ulema-i-Islam-Fazl, together with Sherpao’s Qaumi Watan Party and a bunch of other parties in the KP Assembly, is ever keen and ready to pull the rug from under the PTI feet.

But the PML-N, at least for now, is not willing to take the bait. KP is not an easy province to govern, given the state of security in the violence-hit region, but there is more to it.

The PML-N would like to see the PTI government die its own slow death in five years — like its two immediate predecessors — rather than become a pain in the neck in its citadel of Lahore.


This is so cruel of PMLN:rofl:
 
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PTI has lost it!... Imran Khan cannot just run KPK from Bani Gala anymore and his advisers like Shireen Mazarai is also a liability now instead of being an asset... I wished from day one that he doesn't join coalition without full majority... We can just hope for good and see how IK comes out of this deep trouble..
 
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