Government to ‘seal’ Punjab CM’s office if Elahi doesn’t take trust vote — interior minister

Punjab Chief Minister Pervaiz Elahi gestures as he speaks during an interview in Lahore, Pakistan, on February 14, 2008. (AFP/File)
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Updated 20 December 2022
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Government to ‘seal’ Punjab CM’s office if Elahi doesn’t take trust vote — interior minister

  • Punjab Governor Baligh-ur-Rehman has asked Elahi to take a trust vote from Punjab Assembly on Wednesday 
  • Under Pakistani constitution, a no-trust motion moved against a CM prevents them from dissolving assembly

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s federal government has decided to “seal” the office of Punjab Chief Minister Pervaiz Elahi if he fails to take the vote of confidence from the provincial assembly on Wednesday, local media reported, citing the country’s Interior Minister Rana Sanaullah. 

Punjab Governor Baligh-ur-Rehman, referring to Article 130 (7) of the constitution, on Monday asked CM Elahi to take a vote of confidence from the Punjab Assembly and convened a session of the assembly on Wednesday. 

The development came days after former prime minister Imran Khan announced he would dissolve the Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provincial assemblies on December 23 to pressure the government into announcing nationwide snap polls. Elahi’s Pakistan Muslim League-Quaid (PML-Q) party is a key Khan ally in the Punjab province. 

But Punjab Assembly Speaker Sibtain Khan, a member of Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party, has declared the summoning of the session by the Punjab governor “illegal,” according to local media reports. Under the Pakistani constitution, a no-confidence motion moved against a chief minister prevents them from dissolving the assembly. 

“Punjab CM House will be sealed if Chaudhry Parvez Elahi does not take the vote of confidence or the assembly session does not take place,” Pakistan’s Geo News channel quoted Sanaullah as telling reporters in Lahore on Tuesday. 

Sanaullah said the governor has the power to convene the provincial assembly session and Elahi will have to take the vote even if the provincial assembly session is not held. 

“Elahi will lose the chief ministership if he does not take the trust vote,” he added. 

Khan, who was ousted in a parliamentary no-trust vote in April, has since been campaigning for early elections across the country and agitating against the government of PM Shehbaz Sharif. 

Khan’s PTI party controls two of the country’s four provincial assemblies, while the other two are controlled by his political opponents, who are also in power in the center. The federal government says it will not hold polls before they are due in November 2023. 

Chaudhry Fawad Hussain, a close Khan aide, said on Tuesday the ruling coalition had submitted the no-trust resolution against Elahi to evade elections. 

Hussain said the no-trust move would not succeed, adding the Punjab CM would dissolve the assembly and the “decision of the nation will be final.” 


Global ride-hailing company inDrive eyes expansion into Pakistan’s foodtech, health care sectors

Updated 11 sec ago
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Global ride-hailing company inDrive eyes expansion into Pakistan’s foodtech, health care sectors

  • InDrive CEO Arsen Tomsky says company challenges unfair practices such as inflated rates, high commissions
  • Says Pakistan among inDrive’s top ten markets worldwide, notes country’s large youthful population

ISLAMABAD: The chief executive officer of global ride-hailing company inDrive revealed this week that his organization was eyeing expanding into Pakistan’s foodtech and health care sectors, aiming to tap into the country’s massive young population. 

The development takes place after inDrive announced earlier this month that it was entering Pakistan’s online grocery delivery market by launching a new service in the southern port city of Karachi. inDrive said it would launch the service by partnering with quick commerce platform Krave Mart. 

In an interview with state-run Pakistan TV Digital on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos on Wednesday, the company’s founder and CEO Arsen Tomsky said it enters countries where policies are stable and to challenge what he described as unfair practices such as inflated rates, high commissions and price monopolies. 

“Step by step we will launch into new fields where we see significant injustice,” Tomsky said. “For example, we have started to think about health care. Also this year, we are expanding in foodtech, where we see again, a significant level of injustice.”

Tomsky noted that Pakistan is among the company’s top ten markets globally. He added that the South Asian country presented significant opportunities as it was home to over 250 million people, where a large percentage of the population was young. 

“The market is absolutely booming and taking off,” he said. “I believe in the fantastic future of the country.”

According to inDrive’s website, it was founded in 2013 and incorporated in the US in 2018. inDrive says it is available in 888 cities across 48 countries. 

The ride-hailing platform’s unique feature allows passengers and drivers to negotiate the fare directly. The company says that in 2022 and again in 2023, inDrive was the second most downloaded ride-hailing app worldwide based on Google Play and App Store data.