After six-month vacancy, president approves new governor of southern Sindh province

In this photograph taken on February 13, 2017, commuters drive on a busy street in the Pakistan's port city of Karachi. (AFP/File)
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Updated 09 October 2022
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After six-month vacancy, president approves new governor of southern Sindh province

  • Highest constitutional post of the province was lying vacant since the resignation of Imran Ismail in April
  • New appointee is Kamran Tessori, a gold trader by profession who re-joined the MQM-P party last month

KARACHI: President Arif Alvi on Sunday approved the appointment of Muhammad Kamran Khan Tessori as Governor Sindh, a top constitutional post in the province which had been lying vacant since the resignation of Imran Ismail in April this year.
Speaker Sindh Assembly Aga Siraj Khan Durrani had been serving as acting governor for the last six months.




In this undated photo, MQM-Pakistan's leader Kamran Tessori is seen addressing an event in Karachi. (Photo courses: social media)

The announcement was made from the official Twitter account of the Pakistan president.
“President Dr. Arif Alvi has approved the appointment of Muhammad Kamran Khan Tessori as the Governor of Sindh,” the President House said in a Twitter post. “The President gave this approval under Article 101-1 of the Constitution.”

A gold trader by profession, Tessori started his political career from the platform of Pakistan Muslim League Functional (PML-F) before joining the Muttahida Qaumi Movement Pakistan (MQM-P) in 2017.
However, his party membership was terminated the very next year for his alleged role in dividing his new political faction into MQM-Bahardurabad and MQM-PIB.
Tessori returned to the party last month as member of the central coordination committee, though his entry to the top forum was resisted by party ranks.
While it is not a constitutional requirement, Pakistan’s federal government frequently appoints a person from the Urdu-speaking community as Governor in southern Sindh province where chief minister belongs to the Sindhi community.
The governorship was also one of the main demands the MQM-P had put forward before voting against the country’s former prime minister Imran Khan and joining the new coalition government in April.
The MQM-P proposed the name of Nasreen Jalil as governor Sindh in May and a summary was sent to the president for approval, though she could not become the governor after her 2015 letter to the Indian High Commissioner in Islamabad emerged in which she had sought Indian help against a crackdown on her party leaders and workers in Karachi.
Speaking at a news conference at the Karachi Press Club last month, senior MQM-P leader and federal minister for information technology Syed Aminul Haque said he hoped Jalil’s name would be approved. “She has been proposed by the MQM Pakistan and we hope that she will be appointed as governor Sindh,” he told reporters.
Haque, MQM-P leader Waseem Akhter and the newly appointed governor Sindh Kamran Tessori did not respond to Arab News’ request for a comment regarding the appointment and reported disagreements over the issue within the party.
However, political analyst Mazhar Abbas said the decision was “not political” and had been “imposed.”
“This is not a political but non-political decision imposed over the party,” he told Arab News, adding Tessori’s induction into the central coordination committee had been resisted by the party.
“In a party meeting with non-political people, the MQM-P was communicated that if Tessori could not be inducted into the Rabita [Coordination] Committee, then he should be made governor Sindh,” Abbas said.
“This case resembles that of [the former law minister] Farogh Naseem,” he added. “In his case, the MQM-P openly said it voted for him in the Senate election despite the fact that Naseem was not their man.”


PIA denies social media claim its entire flight crew went missing abroad

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PIA denies social media claim its entire flight crew went missing abroad

  • Airline says the allegation emerged from ‘anti-Pakistan quarters’ to defame both the national carrier
  • Some social media posts recently said a PIA flight crew had gone missing during a layover in Toronto

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) on Sunday dismissed as “fake news” a social media claim that the entire crew of one of its flights had disappeared overseas, saying the post was circulated to defame both the national carrier and the country.

The statement came after social media posts said a PIA flight crew had gone missing during a layover in Toronto, Canada.

Previously, there have been reports that individual crew members have used layovers to remain abroad, often linked by analysts to economic conditions at home and perceived asylum opportunities under Canada’s immigration policies. However, PIA has adopted measures such as holding passports with station managers and assigning older crew to Canada routes to curb the trend.

“A tweet, circulated by certain anti-Pakistan quarters, claiming that the whole crew of a particular #PIA flight is missing, is entirely baseless,” the airline announced in a post on X, adding that the purpose of the message “seems to malign PIA and #Pakistan.”

“There has been no such incident, and the news is fake,” it said.

According to local media reports, the information had been circulated by an “Afghan and anti-Pakistan account.”

“The misleading tweet is part of a well-conceived plan based on hostility toward Pakistan and is aimed at damaging the reputation of the national airline and the country,” Pakistan’s English-language broadsheet, Dawn, quoted the airline spokesperson as saying.

Pakistan has been striving to privatize PIA along with other state-owned enterprises under an International Monetary Fund (IMF) loan program.

The airline was banned from operating in Britain and Europe, though those restrictions have been removed more recently.