PTI with a separate province in Punjab, and PM calls for a consensus before creation of new provinces

Map of Saraiki belt in southern Punjab
Updated 16 April 2018
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PTI with a separate province in Punjab, and PM calls for a consensus before creation of new provinces

  • Decades old demand of a separate province in Punjab gains momentum once again
  • PML-N believes calls for the new province are nothing but a political gimmickry since JPM leaders never came up with this demand in the last five years

LAHORE: The Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) on Sunday threw its support behind calls by a new political party, Janoobi Punjab Suba Mahaz (JPM), for South Punjab to become a separate province.

The senior vice chairman of PTI, Shah Mahmud Qureshi, met leaders of JPM and assured them of his party’s support for their “just demand.”

“PTI fully supports the demand of JPM for a separate province. The Punjab government was in a position to address this issue. However, it refused to do it,” Qureshi told the media. “The new province will help end the deprivations of the people of the area.”

Six members of the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) party quit the legislature and defected from their political faction last week to form Janoobi Punjab Suba Mahaz — a new party seeking for South Punjab to become a separate province.

The legislators — Khusro Bakhtiar, Tahir Bashir Cheema, Basit Bukhari, Rana Qasim Noon, Tahir Iqbal, Balakh Sher Mazari, Asghar Ali Shah and Nasrullah Dreshak — belong to the Saraiki belt, a significant chunk of territory in South Punjab.

Responding to their demand, Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi said the creation of new provinces was only possible if all the political parties reached a consensus on the subject. 

As part of a mandatory procedure for the creation of a new federating unit in Pakistan, he said, no single political party was allowed to introduce an amendment and get it passed in the legislative forums.

“It is not about South Punjab only. The same demands have also been made in other areas of the country, such as Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Sindh and Balochistan. This issue requires political dialogue and all parties should sit together on this issue,” Abbasi said on Saturday while addressing a public gathering in the South Punjab area.

Criticizing the act of the six party legislators who resigned, he said they had remained part of the government for five years but never took up the issue with the party leadership.

The demand for a separate federating unit in the Saraiki territory is not new and has deep roots in Pakistan’s history.

Before the creation of the country, Bahawalpur was an independent state until it was made part of “One Unit” — a geopolitical scheme which divided the country into East and West. But when One Unit was dissolved, Bahawalpur was merged with Punjab, causing its inhabitants to react strongly to that development.

Seth Obaidur Rehman, then chairman of the Municipal Corporation, launched a movement he said was for the protection of Saraiki language. The movement was later transformed into a “Reinstate the State Status” campaign and became political when the Bahawalpur United Front was formed. The Bahawalpur United Front contested the 1970 elections on the slogan of a separate province and won four seats when the Pakistan People’s Party swept the polls across the country. They continued to demand a separate province, but the movement lost momentum during the regime of President Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq.

In the past, the movement for a separate province within Punjab was launched with different names. One group called for a Saraiki Province, the other demanded South Punjab Province, and the residents of Bahawalpur division sought for a Bahawalpur Province.

“South Punjab has historically been a separate administrative unit. It was a separate unit in the era of Muhammad bin Qasim. It had the status of a province even in the Mughal era and also under the rule of Raja Ranjeet Singh. We want the revival of that status,” former senator, Sardar Mohsin Khan Leghari, once said.

“We do not want a province based on ethnicity,” he said while pointing out that about 40 percent of the population in South Punjab was Baloch.

Former Punjab governor and veteran politician from South Punjab, Sardar Zulfiqar Ali Khan Khosa, also supports the creation of a new province but on administrative grounds.

“We don’t support the creation of South Punjab on a linguistic basis. However, if the division is made on administrative grounds, we won’t oppose it,” said Khosa. 

“It’s very difficult for a person living in the border town of Rojhan to come to Lahore and have his grievances addressed.”

The latest developments in calling for a new province in South Punjab come just months before the elections. The national and provincial assembly of Punjab has passed resolutions pertaining to the subject, though they have not been implemented.

However, the proponents of the new province have used the slogan of development this time. “South Punjab is deprived of basic amenities of life. No hospital, no education, no employment for the people. We demand a separate province for development to improve the lives of our people,” said Khusro Bakhtiar, one of the legislators who defected from PML-N.


Imran Khan’s party shutdown draws mixed response; government calls it ‘ineffective’

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Imran Khan’s party shutdown draws mixed response; government calls it ‘ineffective’

  • Ex-PM Khan’s PTI party had called for a ‘shutter-down strike’ to protest Feb. 8, 2024 general election results
  • While businesses reportedly remained closed in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, they continued as normal elsewhere

ISLAMABAD: A nationwide “shutter-down strike” called by former prime minister Imran Khan’s party drew a mixed response in Pakistan on Sunday, underscoring political polarization in the country two years after a controversial general election.

Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PIT) opposition party had urged the masses to shut businesses across the country to protest alleged rigging on the second anniversary of the Feb. 8, 2024 general election.

Local media reported a majority of businesses remained closed in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province, governed by the PTI, while business continued as normal in other provinces as several trade associations distanced themselves from the strike call.

Arab News visited major markets in Islamabad’s G-6, G-9, I-8 and F-6 sectors, as well as commercial hubs in Rawalpindi, which largely remained operational on Sunday, a public holiday when shops, restaurants and malls typically remain open in Pakistan.

“Pakistan’s constitution says people will elect their representatives. But on 8th February 2024, people were barred from exercising their voting right freely,” Allama Raja Nasir Abbas Jafri, the PTI opposition leader in the Senate, said at a protest march near Islamabad’s iconic Faisal Mosque.

Millions of Pakistanis voted for national and provincial candidates during the Feb. 8, 2024 election, which was marred by a nationwide shutdown of cellphone networks and delayed results, leading to widespread allegations of election manipulation by the PTI and other opposition parties. The caretaker government at the time and the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) both rejected the allegations.

Khan’s PTI candidates contested the Feb. 8 elections as independents after the party was barred from the polls. They won the most seats but fell short of the majority needed to form a government, which was made by a smattering of rival political parties led by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif. The government insists the polling was conducted transparently and that Khan’s party was not denied a fair chance.

Authorities in the Pakistani capital deployed a heavy police contingent on the main road leading to the Faisal Mosque on Sunday. Despite police presence and the reported arrest of some PTI workers, Jafri led local PTI members and dozens of supporters who chanted slogans against the government at the march.

“We promise we will never forget 8th February,” Jafri said.

The PTI said its strike call was “successful” and shared videos on official social media accounts showing closed shops and markets in various parts of the country.

The government, however, dismissed the protest as “ineffective.”

“The public is fed up with protest politics and has strongly rejected PTI’s call,” Pakistan’s Information Minister Attaullah Tarar said on X.

“It’s Sunday, yet there is still hustle and bustle.”

Ajmal Baloch, All Pakistan Traders Association president, said they neither support such protest calls, nor prevent individuals from closing shops based on personal political affiliation.

“It’s a call from a political party and we do not close businesses on calls of any political party,” Baloch told Arab News.

“We only give calls of strike on issues related to traders.”

Khan was ousted from power in April 2022 after what is widely believed to be a falling out with the country’s powerful generals. The army denies it interferes in politics. Khan has been in prison since August 2023 and faces a slew of legal challenges that ruled him out of the Feb. 8 general elections and which he says are politically motivated to keep him and his party away from power.

In Jan. 2025, an accountability court convicted Khan and his wife in the £190 million Al-Qadir Trust land corruption case, sentencing him to 14 years and her to seven years after finding that the trust was used to acquire land and funds in exchange for alleged favors. The couple denies any wrongdoing.