After weeks of political wrangling, Pakistan president approves Balighur Rehman as Punjab governor

The undated photo shows Baligh-ur-Rehman, the new governor of Pakistan’s most populous province of Punjab. (Photo courtesy: Government of Pakistan/Twitter)
Short Url
Updated 30 May 2022
Follow

After weeks of political wrangling, Pakistan president approves Balighur Rehman as Punjab governor

  • Development comes after president twice rejected summary for appointment of new governor
  • Uncertainty also prevails in Punjab with regards the fate of Chief Minister Hamza Shehbaz

ISLAMABAD: President Dr. Arif Alvi on Monday granted his approval for the appointment of Baligh-ur-Rehman as the new governor of Pakistan’s most populous province of Punjab, the president’s office said, after weeks of political wrangling between the president and the prime minister’s offices.

The president has at least twice in recent weeks denied approval to a summary sent by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif seeking the replacement of Omar Sarfraz Cheema as the Punjab governor. Alvi, a close aide of ex-premier Imran Khan, on May 21 asked Sharif to reconsider his advice to appoint a new governor. 

A governor in Pakistan is the appointed head of state of a province. He or she is appointed by the president on the advice of the prime minister and can serve for a tenure that lasts up to five years. 

“President Dr. Arif Alvi has approved the appointment of Baligh-ur-Rehman as the Punjab governor,” the president’s office said in a tweet. “The president granted approval on the advice of the prime minister under Article 101 (1) of the constitution.” 

Punjab, the most populous province of the country, has been the center of a political drama for the last several weeks. 

The Sharif government sought to replace Cheema, also a Khan aide, soon after it came to power in April, after Khan was ousted in a parliamentary vote of no-confidence. 

After Cheema refused to step down, the federal government on May 9 attempted to remove him through a Cabinet Division notification, stating that he had ceased to hold the office on the advice of PM Sharif. But President Alvi said he still held the office of the governor and there was “no occasion to propose a new appointment.” 

Uncertainty also prevails in Punjab with regards the fate of Chief Minister Hamza Shehbaz after the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) on May 20 de-seated 25 dissident legislators who belonged to former PM Khan’s party but had defected and voted in Shehbaz’s favor in an April election for the CM’s slot. 

With these 25 lawmakers no longer members of the House, Shehbaz has lost his majority in the Punjab Assembly, raising questions about the status of his government. 

Punjab Assembly Speaker Pervaiz Elahi has also filed a petition in the Lahore High Court seeking Shehbaz’s removal from the chief minister’s post. 


12 killed, 27 injured in suicide blast outside district court in Pakistani capital

Updated 12 min 8 sec ago
Follow

12 killed, 27 injured in suicide blast outside district court in Pakistani capital

  • Attack comes amid surge in violence against Pakistan by Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan group
  • Islamabad says attackers operate from Afghanistan with India backing, Kabul and New Delhi deny

ISLAMABAD: At least twelve people were killed and 27 others injured in a suicide blast outside a court in Islamabad on Tuesday, the interior minister said. 

The explosion took place near the entrance of a district court in Islamabad’s G-11 sector while it was crowded with a large number of litigants.

“As of now, 12 people have been martyred and 27 have been injured,” Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi told reporters. 

“We are already treating the injured, our teams are in the hospitals already. We are providing them the best possible facilities.”

A security official who declined to be named said “Indian-sponsored and Afghan Taliban–backed proxy group “Fitna-ul-Khawarij” carried out the suicide bombing, referring to the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) group that Islamabad says operates from safe havens in Afghanistan, with backing from India. Both nations deny this. 

The latest attack comes a day after militants including a suicide bomber tried to storm a cadet college in Wana, a city in the northwestern South Waziristan district, triggering a gunbattle that killed at least two of the attackers.

On Monday, Pakistani security forces said they had killed 20 Pakistani Taliban insurgents in raids on hideouts in the northwest region bordering Afghanistan as tensions between the two countries escalated. The army said eight militants were killed Sunday in North Waziristan, a former TTP stronghold in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, and 12 others were killed in a separate raid in the Dara Adam Khel district, also in the northwest.

Meanwhile, Pakistan and Afghanistan have blamed each other for the collapse of a third round of peace talks in Istanbul over the weekend. 

The negotiations, facilitated by Qatar and Turkiye, began last month following deadly border clashes that killed dozens of soldiers and civilians on both sides.

TP is separate from but allied with the Afghan Taliban and has been emboldened since the Afghan Taliban’s return to power in 2021. Many TTP leaders and fighters are believed to have taken refuge in Afghanistan since then. 

The Islamabad attack also takes place a day after a deadly car blast in India’s capital New Delhi killed at least eight and injured 20 people. An Indian officer said on Tuesday that police are probing the blast under a law used to fight “terrorism.”

Arch-rivals India and Pakistan frequently trade blame for supporting militant groups against each other. A militant attack in Indian-administered Kashmir in April that killed 22 people, mostly tourists, sparked a four-day confrontation between the nuclear-armed neighbors in May that saw them exchange artillery, drone and air strikes before a ceasefire was brokered by the US.