New council puts Pakistan army chief in economic driving seat

Pakistani Chief of Army Staff Gen Qamar Javed Bajwa congratulates Prime Minister Imran Khan on assuming the office of prime minister during their meeting on Monday, August 27, 2018. (PID)
Updated 21 June 2019
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New council puts Pakistan army chief in economic driving seat

  • This week the government announced a high-powered National Development Council of which the army chief will be a member
  • Revenue Minister Hammad Azhar dispels notion body will dilute civilian power, says prime minister “the final decision-maker”

ISLAMABAD: In the face of a ballooning balance of payments crisis, with the rupee having lost a third of its value and inflation at a five-year high, Pakistan’s powerful military agreed this month to a rare freeze of its hefty budget to help ease the South Asian nation’s slowing economy.
The “critical financial situation,” according to military officials, senior government officers and experts, has also convinced the army that the time to watch the economic downturn from the sidelines is over.
On Tuesday, the government announced a high-powered National Development Council (NDC) that will set the country’s long-term economic policy, and of which the all-powerful army chief, General Qamar Javed Bajwa, will be a member. Both officials and analysts see the move as one of the military’s boldest forays into civilian life in recent years.
In Pakistan, power has changed hands more often through coups than elections and civilian governments have traditionally been subservient to generals on issues of national security — from the fight against Taliban insurgents to ties with arch-rivals India and Afghanistan.
But this is the first time the army has been given a formal seat at the economic table.
With a military expenditure of $11.4 billion in 2018, both government and military officials say the army’s worries about a worsening economic outlook are fair. But analysts also warn that the government will only emerge weakened from a decision to give yet more power to arguably the most powerful institution in Pakistan.
A cabinet member with knowledge of the new council’s formation said being a part of the body would allow the army chief to have a greater say in “the discharge of executive powers.” He declined to be named due to the sensitivity of discussing the inner workings of the military.
“Clearly, the army thinks that it [government] is struggling with the day to day running [of the economy] and so they are saying, ‘we can give our input’” the official said.
Less than a year ago, as cricketer-turned-politician Imran Khan swept to power in a milestone poll that marked only Pakistan’s second transition from one elected government to another, no one could have foreseen he would be in so much trouble. But a crumbling economy in the last many months has seen Prime Minister Khan forced into an International Monetary Fund bailout and running to the military for cover, experts say.
Revenue Minister Hammad Azhar rejected this notion, saying the purpose of the new council was simply to create consensus among all stakeholders.
“It’s not really in the country’s interests that separate wings of the government, whether it’s the executive, the cabinet, the parliament or the military … if they’re not on one page or they’re undercutting one another or playing games with one another,” Azhar said in an interview with Arab News on Tuesday evening.
At the end of the day, the prime minister would be “the final decision-maker” in the council, he said, adding that it was illogical to conclude that military coups in the past meant the government should now “exclude the military from all spheres of the consultative process.”
“Whether anyone likes it or not, the Pakistani military has a huge claim on Pakistan’s budget … So naturally they [army] are directly affected by economic issues,” Azhar said.
The Pakistani army has for years been fighting Taliban insurgents holed up in the country’s northwestern tribal regions bordering Afghanistan and shocking the nuclear-armed state with their ability to launch attacks on both civilian and military targets. Though security has improved in recent years, militants still carry out sporadic assaults.
Pakistan also has tense relations with neighboring India to the east and Afghanistan to the west. It has fought three wars with India since independence from the British in 1947, and early this year, the two countries launched aerial strikes on each other and fought a brief dogfight over Kashmir skies.
“Given the security situation and our geostrategic position, it is also vital that we [government] solicit input from them [army] and give them our input,” Azhar said.
The army’s media wing declined official comment for this article but one military official close to the discussions said the army had “real stakes” in the economy and a right to provide input.
“With this body we can do it in an above-board way,” he said. “We will give recommendations and it is on the government, on cabinet, as and when they accept them.”
“VETTING BODY”
The exact mandate and powers of the body are as yet unclear, experts and officials said.
Two of the broad terms of reference mentioned in the statement announcing the new council relate to regional connectivity and cooperation, suggesting that the army will now have an outsized role in the planning and implementation of international projects.
These include a $60 billion China-Pakistan Economic Corridor of energy and infrastructure projects, free-trade agreements and transnational pipeline deals with various countries, and loan and aid agreements with friendly nations like Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.
The appearance of the word “approve” in the terms of reference has also raised questions over whether the council has powers over and above the cabinet, usually the final authority on policy matters.
This month, Pakistan proposed a belt-tightening budget to tame its fiscal deficit, targeting federal tax revenues of 5.55 trillion rupees ($36.80 billion) and setting austerity measures for both civilian and military rulers.
In this context, Khurram Husain, the business editor for Dawn newspaper, said the new council might also allow the army to exercise “control over revenue and taxation, approval of individual expenditure items, rate policy, customs duties ... the day to day exercise of prime ministerial powers.”
The cabinet member with knowledge of the NDC’s establishment said the body was initially conceived merely as a discussion forum but it’s “exact role will evolve over the coming weeks and months … how exactly and to what extent it can approve decisions.”
Mohammad Malick, a political anchor and head of Hum News channel, said it was unclear how often the body would meet and at what level it would become involved in economic decision-making.
“At the planning stage? Before a matter goes to the cabinet?” he asked. “If the body’s role comes after the cabinet, then it becomes a supra-body and that will create complications because constitutionally, ultimate authority vests with the cabinet.”
“AN ADULT IN THE ROOM”
Whatever the exact terms of the new council, opposition politicians said its formation was evidence that the army was convinced the civilian government was not up to the economic task.
“To me the military’s inclusion [in the NDC] is more of a reflection on the civilian govt and its performance, that it needs to have the army chief come in and create some discipline and consistency in economic policy,” Miftah Ismail, Pakistan’s finance minister in the previous government, said. “The feeling is that this is beyond the government’s experience and competence and so they need an adult in the room.”
Ultimately, officials said, the purpose of the new council was “power sharing.”
“This is about sharing power and also sharing responsibility,” the cabinet member said. “Now the economy isn’t just the government’s problem. The army will also have to answer.”
But Dawn’s Husain warned that making the army a stakeholder in a major economic body was a step in the wrong direction for coup-prone Pakistan and its fledgling democracy.
“This represents a setback or a step in the opposite direction from the one that was taken in 2008,” he said, referring to the year that marked the end of Pakistan’s last era of direct military rule. “The direction seems to be going backwards toward pre-2008, rather than forward toward civilian supremacy.”


Pakistan committee discusses development of border areas in inaugural session

Updated 04 May 2024
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Pakistan committee discusses development of border areas in inaugural session

  • The committee was formed to devise comprehensive strategies for holistic development in Pakistan’s border regions
  • Key topics that came under discussion at the inaugural session included tariff rationalization, employment creation

ISLAMABAD: A high-level committee tasked with development of Pakistan’s border regions on Saturday held its inaugural session in Islamabad to discuss the challenges facing communities based in the country’s frontier regions, the Pakistani commerce ministry said.

The inaugural session of the committee, which was formed to devise comprehensive strategies for holistic development in these areas, was presided over by Commerce Minister Jam Kamal Khan, according to the ministry.

Key topics that came under discussion at the meeting included tariff rationalization and employment creation, reflecting the committee’s commitment to addressing border communities’ challenges.

“The committee aims to present its recommendations to the Prime Minister within 10 days, signaling a promising start to collaborative efforts for socio-economic development in the region,” the commerce ministry said in a statement.

Pakistan shares a long, porous border with Iran and Afghanistan, with people live along it relying on cross-border trade with little or no government tariffs, quotas, subsidies or prohibitions.

Islamabad last year announced restrictions on the informal trade to discourage smuggling of goods and currency in order to support the country’s dwindling economy.

Pakistan’s trade with China mostly takes place through formal channels, while the country’s trade ties with India, another neighbor it shares border with, remain suspended since 2019 over the disputed region of Kashmir.


Pakistan records ‘wettest April’ in more than 60 years — weather agency

Updated 04 May 2024
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Pakistan records ‘wettest April’ in more than 60 years — weather agency

  • Pakistan’s metrology department says April rainfall was recorded at 59.3 millimeters, ‘excessively above’ the normal average of 22.5 millimeters
  • There were at least 144 deaths in thunderstorms and house collapses due to heavy rains in what the report said was the ‘wettest April since 1961’

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan experienced its “wettest April since 1961,” receiving more than twice as much rain as usual for the month, the country’s weather agency said in a report.

April rainfall was recorded at 59.3 millimeters, “excessively above” the normal average of 22.5 millimeters, Pakistan’s metrology department said late Friday in its monthly climate report.

There were at least 144 deaths in thunderstorms and house collapses due to heavy rains in what the report said was the “wettest April since 1961.”

Pakistan is increasingly vulnerable to unpredictable weather, as well as often destructive monsoon rains that usually arrive in July.

In the summer of 2022, a third of Pakistan was submerged by unprecedented monsoon rains that displaced millions of people and cost the country $30 billion in damage and economic losses, according to a World Bank estimate.

“Climate change is a major factor that is influencing the erratic weather patterns in our region,” Zaheer Ahmad Babar, spokesperson for the Pakistan Meteorological Department, said while commenting on the report.

While much of Asia is sweltering dure to heat waves, Pakistan’s national monthly temperature for April was 23.67 degrees Celsius (74 degrees Fahrenheit) 0.87 degrees lower than the average of 24.54, the report noted.


Fire erupts at Karachi garment factory, no loss of live reported

Updated 04 May 2024
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Fire erupts at Karachi garment factory, no loss of live reported

  • The biggest Pakistani city, known for poor fire safety protocols, witnesses hundreds of such incidents annually
  • In November last year, a blaze at a shopping mall in Karachi killed around a dozen people and injured several others

KARACHI: A fire broke out at a garment factory in the southern Pakistani city of Karachi on Saturday, rescue officials said.

The blaze erupted on the ground floor of the garment factory in Zarina Colony in the New Karachi area, according to Rescue 1122 service.

“One fire truck is actively participating in the operation,” a Rescue 1122 spokesperson said, adding that another fire tender has been called to the site.

No loss of life has been reported in the wake of the fire.

Karachi, Pakistan’s largest city and the main commercial hub, is home to hundreds of thousands of industrial units and some of the tallest buildings in the South Asian country. 

The megapolis, known for its fragile firefighting system and poor safety controls, witnesses hundreds of such incidents annually.

In Nov., a blaze at a shopping mall killed around a dozen people and injured several others. In April last year, four firefighters died and nearly a dozen others were injured after a fire broke out at a garment factory, while 10 people were killed in a massive fire at a chemical factory in the city in August 2021. 

In the deadliest such incident, 260 people were killed in 2012 after being trapped inside a garment factory when a fire broke out.


Saleem Haider Khan, Faisal Kundi named governors of Pakistan’s Punjab, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provinces

Updated 04 May 2024
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Saleem Haider Khan, Faisal Kundi named governors of Pakistan’s Punjab, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provinces

  • Nominations come as part of power-sharing deal between PM Sharif’s party and ex-FM Bhutto-Zardari-led faction
  • According to the deal, the PPP backed Sharif for the prime minister’s office in return for constitutional positions

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP), a coalition partner in Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s government, has nominated Saleem Haider Khan and Faisal Karim Kundi as governors of Pakistan’s eastern Punjab and northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provinces, the PPP chairman announced on Friday.

The PPP forged an alliance with PM Sharif’s Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) party after Pakistan’s national election on February 8 failed to present a clear winner.

According to the power-sharing deal, the PPP backed Sharif for the prime minister’s office in return for the presidency, chairman of Senate and other important constitutional positions.

In a post on X, PPP Chairman Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari congratulated Khan and Kundi, and extended his good wishes to them

“I am confident they [Khan and Kundi] will perform their duties with the dignity their new office demands,” he said on X.

In Pakistan, a governor is a representative of the state to a province, who is appointed by the president on the advice of the prime minister.

Such positions may seem ceremonial and symbolic, but they do hold significant constitutional importance.

At present, PML-N’s Balighur Rehman has been serving as the Punjab governor, while JUI-F’s Hajji Ghulam Ali holds the post in KP.

Bhutto-Zardari also called on PM Sharif in Islamabad, following the nominations, Pakistani state media reported.

“During the meeting, views were exchanged on overall political situation in the country and matters of national interest,” the Radio Pakistan broadcaster said.


Pakistan Cricket Board confirms details of national side’s South Africa tour

Updated 04 May 2024
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Pakistan Cricket Board confirms details of national side’s South Africa tour

  • The side will depart for Durban on December 2 after returning from Australia in Nov.
  • The ODIs will be played from December 17-22 in Paarl, Cape Town, and Johannesburg

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) on Friday announced details of the Pakistan men’s cricket team’s tour of South Africa for three Twenty20, three one-day international and two Test matches in the second half of 2024.

Durban, Centurion, and Johannesburg will host the T20Is from December 10-14, according to the PCB. The ODIs will be played from December 17-22 in Paarl, Cape Town, and Johannesburg, while the two ICC World Test Championship 2023-25 matches will be held at Centurion (December 26-30) and Cape Town (January 3-7).

The side will depart for Durban on December 2 after returning from Australia on November 19, having featured in a series of three ODIs and three T20Is from November 4-18. After completing their African safari on January 8, Pakistan will take on New Zealand and South Africa in a three-nation ODI tournament on home turf, which will be followed by the eight-team ICC Champions Trophy 2025 in Pakistan.

“Prior to the tours of Australia and South Africa, Pakistan will host Bangladesh and England for two and three Tests, respectively,” the PCB said in a statement. “This means they will play seven Tests, minimum of 10 ODIs, and six T20Is in the six-month period from August 2024 to January 2025.”

This will be Pakistan’s seventh Test tour of South Africa since 1994-95. Their two Test wins were in the 1997-98 and 2006-2007 series.

In the Durban Test in 1997-98, Pakistan won by 29 runs at the back of centuries from Azhar Mahmood (132) and Saeed Anwar (118), match figures of nine for 149 by Mushtaq Ahmed and a first innings five-fer by Shoaib Akhtar. In the 2006-2007 Port Elizabeth Test, Pakistan won by five wickets with Inzamam-ul-Haq being named as Player of the Match for his 92 in the first innings.

In ODIs, Pakistan has won two of the last three series in 2013-2014 and 2020-21, while South Africa triumphed in 2002-2003 (4-1), 2006-2007 (3-1), 2012-2013 (3-2), and 2018-2019 (3-2).

In 12 T20Is to date, Pakistan leads 6-5 in head-to-head encounters, with one match ending in no-result.

Tour schedule:

10 Dec – 1st T20I, Durban

13 Dec – 2nd T20I, Centurion

14 Dec – 3rd T20I, Johannesburg

17 Dec – 1st ODI, Paarl

19 Dec – 2nd ODI, Cape Town

22 Dec – 3rd ODI, Johannesburg

26-30 Dec – 1st Test, Centurion

3-7 Jan – 2nd Test, Cape Town