Pakistan-origin British politician resigns from UK Conservative Party over far-right shift

Baroness Sayeeda Warsi (C) joins people at a vigil in the Indian Muslim Welfare Society's Al-Hikmah Centre in Batley, northern England, on June 17, 2016. (AFP/File)
Short Url
Updated 27 September 2024
Follow

Pakistan-origin British politician resigns from UK Conservative Party over far-right shift

  • Sayeeda Warsi, first Muslim cabinet minister, has highlighted her heritage throughout her career
  • Her resignation comes at a time when Conservatives are looking for a new leader to replace Sunak

ISLAMABAD: Baroness Sayeeda Warsi, Britain’s first Muslim cabinet minister of Pakistan origin, resigned from the Conservative Party’s whip in the House of Lords on Thursday, citing the party’s shift to the far-right in a social media post.

Born in Dewsbury, West Yorkshire, Warsi’s parents migrated from Pakistan to the United Kingdom, and she frequently highlighted her Pakistani heritage during her political career.

She made history in 2010 by becoming Britain’s first Muslim cabinet minister under Prime Minister David Cameron’s government.

Warsi expressed concerns over her party’s treatment of a pro-Palestinian activist, Marieha Hussain, who was acquitted of racially aggravated charges. The British politician criticized the Conservative leadership for revisiting the issue despite the legal verdict in Hussain’s favor.

“It is with a heavy heart that I have today informed my whip and decided for now to no longer take the @Conservatives whip,” she wrote on X, formally Twitter.

“I am a Conservative and remain so but sadly the current Party are far removed from the Party I joined and served in Cabinet,” she continued. “My decision is a reflection of how far right my Party has moved and the hypocrisy and double standards in its treatment of different communities.”

She called it a “timely reminder of the issues” she raised in her book “Muslims Don’t Matter.”

Warsi’s resignation comes at a time when Conservative leaders are preparing to hold a conference to decide the party’s future, where four top members will make their case to replace Rishi Sunak, the former UK prime minister under whose stewardship the party lost the recent elections.


Pakistan’s Engro executes $475 million Islamic financing deal to expand telecom infrastructure

Updated 6 sec ago
Follow

Pakistan’s Engro executes $475 million Islamic financing deal to expand telecom infrastructure

  • Islamic banking accounts for over a fifth of Pakistan’s banking assets amid a shift toward Shariah-compliant finance
  • The deal brings more than 10,000 telecom towers under Engro’s control, enabling their shared use by multiple operators

KARACHI: Pakistan’s largest conglomerate Engro Corp. has completed a Rs133 billion ($475 million) Islamic financing deal to acquire telecom tower company Deodar, expanding its telecom infrastructure business as the country seeks to strengthen digital connectivity, the company said on Friday.

The transaction, structured entirely through Shariah-compliant financing, brings more than 10,000 telecom towers under Engro’s control and marks one of the largest Islamic financing deals in Pakistan’s infrastructure sector.

Engro, which has major interests in energy, fertilizers, food and petrochemicals, said the acquisition would allow it to scale shared telecom infrastructure, under which a single tower can host multiple mobile network operators, lowering costs and reducing duplication as Pakistan prepares for next-generation digital services.

“My congratulations to the Dawood family and Engro, the Islamic bankers and conventional banks through their Islamic windows on being able to put together a deal of this size,” State Bank of Pakistan Governor Jameel Ahmed said at a ceremony marking the transaction, referring to the company and its chairman. “This is a great achievement which has been supported by the banks.”

The deal was supported by a group of local banks, including United Bank Limited and Meezan Bank, Engro said, highlighting the increasing role of Islamic financing in funding long-term investment in Pakistan.

Islamic banking, which operates without interest and is based on profit-and-loss sharing structures, accounts for more than a fifth of Pakistan’s banking assets, and authorities have said they aim to transition the financial system toward Shariah compliance over the coming years.

The acquisition of Deodar, which was originally carved out of mobile operator Jazz, also aligns with government efforts to digitize the economy by expanding broadband access and supporting digital payments, e-commerce and online public services, though progress has remained uneven due to infrastructure and regulatory challenges.