Pakistan National Assembly speaker 'violated' constitution by delaying key session — opposition leader

Chairman of the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) Bilawal Bhutto Zardari speaks during an anti-government march on his arrival in Lahore on March 6, 2022. (AFP/File)
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Updated 20 March 2022
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Pakistan National Assembly speaker 'violated' constitution by delaying key session — opposition leader

  • Opposition parties submitted a no-confidence motion against Prime Minister Imran Khan on March 8
  • The 14-day constitutional deadline to convene NA session on no-trust requisition expires March 21

ISLAMABAD: The speaker of the National Assembly (NA) of Pakistan "violated" the constitution by delaying a key session of the lower house of parliament to March 25, a Pakistani opposition leader said on Sunday, in which the no-trust resolution against Prime Minister Imran Khan is expected to be tabled. 

The opposition had warned NA Speaker Asad Qaiser a day earlier not to delay the no-confidence motion while asking him to summon the National Assembly session on Monday, March 21, to fulfil his constitutional obligation. 

The opposition, which blames Khan for mismanaging the country, economy and foreign policy, filed the no-confidence motion against him on March 8. 

According to law, the NA speaker has a maximum of 14 days to summon a session of parliament to table the no-trust resolution. Monday, March 21 is the last day. 

"The coward captain is running away from the vote of no-confidence, to an extent that he has the constitution violated by his speaker," Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, the chairman of the opposition's Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP), said at a press conference in Islamabad. 

"A winning captain doesn't run away from a match. The one who is seeing his defeat, the way he is running away is in front of you." 

He said Speaker Qaiser had summoned the session after the expiry of 14-day constitutional period since the filing of the requisition. 

"This is not up to the speaker. The constitution of Pakistan says he has to summon the session in 14 days," the PPP chairman said. 

He noted the South Asian had the precedent to hold a vote seven days after the submission of a no-confidence motion. 




National Assembly session being held under the chairmanship of speaker Asad Qaiser in Islamabad, Pakistan, on May 17, 2021. (Photo courtesy: National Assembly of Pakistan)

Earlier, a tweet on the social media account of the lower house of parliament confirmed Speaker Qaiser had convened a meeting of the National Assembly at 11 am on Friday, March 25.

The decision was taken under Articles 54 (3) and 254 of Pakistan’s constitution, it added. 

In a subsequent tweet, it was said that the session had been convened in response to the opposition’s requisition. 

PPP Senator Sherry Rehman said the constitution clearly mentioned that the speaker had to convene the session within 14 days of the opposition’s request. 

“How can he convene a session on March 25?” she asked while speaking to Geo News. “The outer limits of the session [when it can be convened] as per the constitution, is within 14 days. If we count, the 14-day deadline expires tomorrow.” 

Rehman warned the speaker he would be committing a "serious crime" if he did not summon the session on Monday. 

“He is taking the country toward a very dangerous constitutional crisis,” she noted. 

The PPP leader also urged the speaker “not to make a joke” of his constitutional post. 

In response to a question, she said the Organization of Islamic Cooperation’s meeting should be held in a cordial atmosphere. 

“The government, however, cannot violate the constitution by hiding behind the OIC conference,” she added. 


Worm-powered farming gains ground in climate-stressed Sindh

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Worm-powered farming gains ground in climate-stressed Sindh

  • Local growers say organic compost improves soil, lowers farming costs
  • Producers hope to begin exporting vermicompost to Gulf markets

KARACHI: In the flood-scarred plains of southern Pakistan, where rising salinity and hardened soil are squeezing farm incomes, 30-year-old Dhani Satram has found unlikely allies: earthworms.

The mother of six farms in Bachal Sand village in Sindh’s Tando Allahyar district. In recent years, her sugarcane fields were losing productivity as repeated floods and long dry spells compacted the land.

Now she produces and applies vermicompost — an organic fertilizer made with worms — and says the results have been dramatic.

“First, we bring animal dung and water it. Then we make a bed and put the worms into it. When it is ready, we apply it to our crops,” she told Arab News, describing the simple process she carries out at home.

A man is checking examining vermicompost on a farm in Tando Allahyar district of Pakistan's Sindh province on February 11, 2026. (AN photo)

The results, she said, speak for themselves.

“Earlier, our sugarcane crop used to yield 1,000 mounds per acre. Now, we are getting 1,500 to 2,000 mounds per acre.”

A mound, a traditional South Asian agricultural unit of weight, equals 40 kilograms.

Worms are crawling over animal manure on a farm in Tando Allahyar district of Pakistan's Sindh province on February 11, 2026. (AN photo)

Pakistan ranks among the countries most vulnerable to climate change. Intense monsoon rains and recurring floods regularly damage farmland, particularly in Sindh, where soil has also become increasingly saline and hard.

Vermicompost — often called “black gold” in Europe — is produced when earthworms break down organic waste into nutrient-rich fertilizer.

In Tando Allahyar, the movement is being led by 61-year-old Khalid Maqsood, founder of K-Organic, who runs what he says is Pakistan’s largest vermicompost training center.

Maqsood said he trained in India in 2015 and initially imported worms from England. He has since multiplied them locally into hundreds of composting beds.

“This vermicompost basically works on materials that are decomposable, except citrus,” he said. “It uses a specific Australian-bred worm called Eisenia fetida. Whatever it eats is decomposed. This is one of the fastest natural methods of decomposition in the world.”

A man is checking examining vermicompost on a farm in Tando Allahyar district of Pakistan's Sindh province on February 11, 2026. (AN photo)

He said the organic fertilizer is particularly useful in areas hit by floods and water shortages.

“With vermicompost, our crops and our land would not dry out the way they do with chemical fertilizers,” he said.

According to Maqsood, years of heavy chemical fertilizer use have made soil harder and less able to absorb water. Organic compost helps soften it, allowing rainwater to seep into the ground rather than run off.

He said the benefits are practical as well as environmental.

“When we use vermicompost, our expenses are reduced,” he said. “We saved Rs8,000 ($28.6) by cutting plowing. We reduced chemical fertilizer use. We also saved 20 percent water.”

The approach is spreading beyond Satram’s fields.

Mawjee Kachi, 38, who grows sugarcane, cotton, wheat and vegetables on six acres in the same village, said chemical fertilizers were no longer delivering results.

“The soil was getting hard and there was a water shortage,” he said. “After using vermicompost, the soil has become softer. The crops have grown well. There has been an increase in the average yield.”

“Earlier it was 800-900 [mounds per acre]. Now it has increased to 1,500-2,000.”

Women farmers are sifting soil on a farm in Tando Allahyar district of Pakistan's Sindh province on February 11, 2026. (AN photo)

Beerchand, a farm supervisor trained at Maqsood’s center who only goes by a single name, has now started vermicomposting at a 2,500- to 3,000-acre farm in Mirpurkhas district.

“We have experimented with it,” he said. “We will increase it further ... If we are successful, we will expand it more.”

While it is still a relatively new agricultural method at the national level, Maqsood said universities and agricultural institutions in Sindh are now collaborating with his center, and the government is planning training programs to promote the practice.

He has also begun receiving export inquiries.

“We are currently at an early stage and don’t have enough quantity for exports,” he said, adding: “Within two years or even before that we hope to begin exporting.”

He sees the strongest potential in Gulf countries.

“The biggest and nearest markets are Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates,” Maqsood said.

“It has already given best results in date farming,” he added.