
'No political space in sight for PTI'
Political space for opposition parties, particularly the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI), may have further shrunk after the establishment bolstered its ties with the West, as analysts suggest that the beleaguered party's chances of making a political comeback during the current regime were virtually nonexistent.
However, they caution that the budding relationship with the Trump administration could be a volatile, double-edged sword for the powers that be.
Former Punjab caretaker chief minister and senior political analyst Hasan Askari said that PTI has no political future under the current dispensation, which he described as being firmly controlled by a powerful establishment.
According to him, the establishment has only grown stronger in the wake of two mini-wars in the region.
'This setup will not cede any space to PTI, as it would mark the beginning of their own undoing. They cannot afford for PTI to do politicking on the streets. As long as they have power, they will keep Imran behind bars,' Askari said.
He further noted that no government since Benazir Bhutto's first stint in power had ceded this much ground to the military as the current one has.
Askari said that the current setup, which derives its strength "from the very top," could last for a considerable period. However, when it falls, 'it will go down like a house of cards'. He added that PTI will likely outlive this regime and will 'rise from the ruins' the moment it is granted political space.
Regarding Pakistan's relations with the US, he said that Islamabad's 'relations with America will last for as long as their interests and ours are aligned'. Pakistan may benefit in the short term, he added, but this relationship is contextual. 'Tomorrow, when our utility diminishes, so will the warmth in the relationship.'
Another political analyst, Rasool Bakhsh Rais, said that while PTI may currently be in a bind, it was rapidly regaining ground. 'PML-N and PPP are steadily losing what little public legitimacy they had,' he said.
Rais pointed to the Supreme Court's recent decision to hand over PTI's reserved seats to PML-N and PPP, saying it 'has exposed the underbelly of this hybrid-plus regime'.
He said that the West has a long history of supporting dictatorships and autocratic regimes when it suits its interests. 'Even in our case, American support for the establishment is only delegitimising the political government. The system might have gained strength, but constitutionally it has become frail.'
He added that PTI founder Imran Khan would not buckle under pressure and would stand his ground. 'Imran Khan is a beacon of hope for Pakistan's political system. His stand is in the interest of the country,' Rais said.
He noted that while the current dispensation may ignore public perception for now, 'soon they will understand what the opinion of a common man is worth'.
Another analyst, Salman Abid, agreed that cordial ties with the US come at a price. He described the US-Pakistan relationship as purely transactional.
'America has significant strategic interests in this region, and it sees Pakistan as crucial to achieving those goals,' he said, adding that this friendship would not come as a 'free lunch".
Abid expressed concern that Pakistan's growing closeness with the US could distance it from its long-time ally, China. 'This system has no political weight, and it will continue to function only so long as it has wind in its sails,' he said.
He warned that such power structures in Pakistan have a long history of failing spectacularly.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Business Recorder
3 hours ago
- Business Recorder
Flood project: Pakistan govt seeks $31m financing boost from World Bank
ISLAMABAD: The government of Pakistan has requested the World Bank for increasing the financing envelope by $31 million as well as restructuring of Integrated Flood Resilience and Adaptation Project. The request was made to better align the project with current implementation capacity, performance of the component and operational their readiness, and a stronger focus on resilience. Official sources revealed that the request was based on series of discussions from between senior management of the World Bank, government of Pakistan, and government of Balochistan. The project development objective (PDO) is to improve livelihoods and essential services and enhance flood risk protection in selected communities affected by the 2022 floods. World Bank rates IFRAP implementation as 'moderately unsatisfactory' The proposed additional financing of $31 million and reallocation of US$54 million from other components will support activities under Component 3 of the Parent Project which will increase impact and expand the provision of multi-hazard resilient housing units and livelihoods in Balochistan. The AF will facilitate increasing funding for the housing subsidy grant to 102,000 beneficiaries from the current 35,100. The Additional Financing (AF) aims to scale up housing reconstruction activities in Balochistan Province, covering additional eligible beneficiaries whose homes were affected by the 2022 floods. The affected households were initially identified through the damage assessment conducted by the Government of Balochistan (GoB) and subsequently by the implementing partners of the Project. The AF also includes a Level 2 Restructuring, which reduces the scope of activities under Components 1 and 4 of the Project. It also modifies the Results Framework (RF) to update indicators and targets, including the addition of a relevant World Bank Group Corporate Scorecard FY24–30 indicator. The restructuring does not include any new types of activities, and the Project Development Objective (PDO) remains unchanged. With this AF, the total Project commitment will increase to US$244 million. The need for AF was identified during the implementation of IFRAP. Balochistan was among the provinces most severely affected by the 2022 floods. The Post-Disaster Needs Assessment estimated damage to the housing sector in Balochistan at over $400 million. To address this challenge, the Parent Project was initiated with $75 million equivalent IDA credit for housing reconstruction. However, a significant financing gap remains to fully rehabilitate the damaged housing units in the province. The revised project description is as follows: 12. Component 1 – Community Infrastructure Rehabilitation. This component will finance the rehabilitation of priority community infrastructure damaged by floods, including irrigation and flood protection infrastructure, roads and bridges located in calamity-declared districts of Balochistan. The guiding principle is to build back better with improved infrastructure based on climate risks, improved engineering design standards, and improved construction and maintenance to enhance resilience. The component will also include the technical assistance needed for the design and supervision of the works and for the development of operation and maintenance of the infrastructure. 13. Component 2: Strengthening Hydromet and Climate Services. This component will enhance the PMD capacity to generate and use hydrometeorological information for decision-making, particularly by expanding coverage in the western region, benefiting Balochistan as well as other parts of the country. While financing remains unchanged, cost escalations have reduced the number of Automatic Weather Stations (AWS) from 300 to 110. To ensure sustainability and impact, deployment will prioritize high-risk areas such as flash flood-prone regions in South Punjab and Sindh, aligning with PMD's operational capacity. 14. Component 3: Resilient Housing Reconstruction and Restoration. This component will finance: (i) resilient housing reconstruction grants to beneficiaries for the reconstruction of core housing units damaged by floods; and (ii) institutional strengthening and technical assistance for the reconstruction. It will also support the objective of improved livelihoods generation in the construction sector and allied subsectors. 15. Component 4: Project Management, Technical Assistance, and Institutional Strengthening. This component will support: (i) project management for the FPMU and the provincial PIUs; (ii) technical assistance for M&E, Project Supervision and Implementation Assistance (PSIA), preparation of SoP2, and preparation of community flood resilience plans; and (iii) institutional strengthening through capacity building and drafting a Water Act. 16. Component 5: Contingent Emergency Response. This component facilitates the provision of immediate response to an Eligible Crisis or Emergency, as needed. Following an adverse natural event that causes a major disaster or emergency, the GoP may request the Bank to reallocate project funds to support response and reconstruction. Resources will be allocated to this component as needed during implementation. 17. Results Framework. There are no changes to the PDO. The RF has been updated in line with the revised project design. The indicator 'people with enhanced protection to flood risk' is revised to align with the corporate scorecard indicator 'people with enhanced resilience to climate risks', including its sub-indicators reporting on youth and women. Copyright Business Recorder, 2025


Express Tribune
7 hours ago
- Express Tribune
Punjab PTI MPAs face speaker's reference
Listen to article Punjab Assembly Speaker Malik Muhammad Ahmad Khan has announced that a reference will be sent to the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) against 26 suspended PTI MPAs over their "disruptive, abusive and violative" conduct during a recent assembly session. The move follows the suspension issued on June 27 under Rule 210(3) of the Rules of Procedure of the provincial legislature of the Punjab, 1997, after the members disrupted Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz's address with slogans and ruckus in the House. Further escalating tensions, the speaker also ordered recovery of Rs2,035,000 in damages from 10 PTI MPAs - Rs203,550 each – for climbing desks and damaging eight microphones during their June 16 protest during the provincial budget presentation. In another incident, PTI MPA Hassan Malik (PP-81) was barred from attending the assembly until the current session is prorogued, following his act of hurling a copy of the budget speech at Finance Minister Mian Mujtaba Shuja Ur Rehman. On June 24, the speaker gave a ruling stressing the importance of maintaining parliamentary decorum: "I emphasise all members, regardless of their political affiliation, in order to preserve decorum, uphold the dignity of this august Assembly, and ensure that parliamentary proceedings can continue without disruption." "I shall take all the steps within the legal framework to maintain order and uphold dignity of this august House and its members," he further warned. The response came after Opposition Leader Malik Ahmad Khan Bhachar raised a point of order, defending protest as a constitutional right. To determine the limits of that right, the speaker cited Rule 223 of the Assembly's Rules of Procedure, enacted under Article 67, read with Article 127 of the Constitution, which outlines members' conduct in the House. However, Bhachar strongly condemned the speaker's orders and vowed the opposition would continue its protest undeterred by threats of de-seating or financial penalties. "It was decided in our parliamentary meeting that opposition members will enter and leave the House silently," he said, noting that when he attempted to speak on a point of order, the speaker did not grant him the floor. PTI rejects 'fascist tactics' Meanwhile, senior PTI leaders blasted the ruling coalition and the judiciary, denouncing the "orchestrated campaign" to suppress the party and dismantle democracy. They firmly rejected the notion of a "Minus Imran" formula. In a joint press conference with suspended Punjab Assembly members, PTI legal counsel Salman Akram Raja, Opposition Leader Malik Ahmad Khan Bhachar, and senior lawyer Sardar Latif Khosa condemned the systematic persecution of their party. "There is no Minus-Imran plan. The party hasn't even considered such a thing," Salman Akram Raja said. "For 78 years, we've been fed the illusion of democracy, when in reality, we've only seen authoritarian rule," he added, accusing the state of continuously installing "political proxies". Raja noted that PTI had engaged even with those "propped up on crutches", only to meet inertia. "Every time we met them, they said: 'We'll ask and let you know.' Even when we requested a meeting with our party founder, they again said they had to seek permission. They admitted they had no authority. So, what are we to negotiate with such powerlessness?" Regarding the Swat tragedy, where 16 tourists lost their lives in a flash flood, Raja acknowledged the limits of governance in natural calamities, adding, "If a family on a picnic is struck by an act of God, what can any government do? The K-P government isn't Superman." Opposition Leader Bhachar reiterated claims of institutional overreach. "We're resisting fascism in the Punjab Assembly," he said. "Last night, they launched a surprise assault and suspended 26 of our members." Bhachar maintained that PTI lawmakers had exercised their constitutional right to protest. "Not only were we suspended, but they also fined us. And now they're preparing to file references in the Election Commission," he said, pointing out double standards in the chamber. "The deputy speaker was raising slogans from the chair... has any action been taken against him?" He added that he had tried three times to take the floor but was not allowed to speak. "It is a principle that the opposition leader must be given the floor when he rises," Bhachar said, noting that legal consultation on the fines is underway. Sardar Latif Khosa, meanwhile, took aim at the judiciary. "Justice Qazi Faez Isa's decisions are equivalent to murdering democracy," he said. "The nation is holding him accountable — and will continue to do so." He also questioned the legitimacy of the chief election commissioner's continued service. "He's retired, yet still sitting due to the 26th constitutional amendment," Khosa said, adding that the notion of military courts for civilians was incompatible with democracy. Calling the SC's reserved seats case decision "the darkest in its history", Khosa said, "We had a two-thirds majority, yet we are to receive zero Senate seats? There cannot be a more disgraceful or repugnant decision than this." "These decisions will cost the nation for centuries," he warned, pledging never to surrender. "We are fighting for the rights of the people of Pakistan." Salman Akram Raja said PTI's commitment remained undeterred. "Yesterday's decision has not weakened our commitment. We will restore the rights of the people," he declared. "This case isn't about PTI or the Sunni Ittehad Council alone — it belongs to every citizen." "We reject this verdict, and will continue to do so," he asserted. He accused the state of sidelining PTI from the February 8 general elections. "First, our electoral symbol was snatched. Then, our reserved seats were looted in the dark of night." "In Pakistan's entire legal history, there are only two rulings that went against tyranny. This was not one of them," he added. "Our opposition seats were distributed like spoils of war to other parties. The Constitution demands that reserved seats be proportionally allocated to parties winning general seats." "In this country, democracy has been treated like forbidden fruit," Raja said. "There's no doubt that PTI is the largest political force. Yesterday was just another failed attempt to silence that voice."


Express Tribune
7 hours ago
- Express Tribune
Ex-senator secures bail in murder case
Additional District and Sessions Judge Rawalpindi, Majid Hussain Gadhi, Saturday approved the bail on medical grounds of Chaudhry Tanveer Khan, a former Senator from the Pakistan Muslim League-N (PML-N). Tanveer was arrested in the murder case of Chaudhry Adnan, a former PTI MPA and ex-provincial parliamentary secretary. The court ordered his immediate release, subject to the submission of two surety bonds worth Rs1 million each, which were promptly furnished. Despite being under arrest, Tanveer was admitted to the Rawalpindi Institute of Cardiology (RIC) due to a serious heart condition, with a police guard stationed outside his hospital ward. Following the court's approval of bail, jail officials and police personnel were withdrawn per the instructions of the Superintendent of Adiala Jail, effectively restoring former legislator's status as a free citizen. Chaudhry Tanveer had voluntarily surrendered on June 17 before the Lahore High Court (LHC) Rawalpindi Bench by withdrawing his pre-arrest bail application. Police took him into custody from the courtroom and obtained a two-day physical remand, after which he was sent to judicial custody but admitted to the hospital due to his heart condition. He had been accused of conspiring and planning the targeted killing of Chaudhry Adnan, who was shot dead near the Police Lines gate in Rawalpindi. The FIR was registered on February 12, 2024, at Civil Lines Police Station, naming Chaudhry Tanveer, Osama Chaudhry, Daniyal Chaudhry, and Chaudhry Changez as suspects. During the bail hearing, the court observed that evidence regarding the conspiracy allegation was insufficient, leading to the approval of bail. The defence was led by advocate Malik Waheed Anjum, while co-counsel Chaudhry Yasir Advocate stated that the surrender was made voluntarily to ensure a fair and transparent investigation, and they would continue to pursue the case to prove their client's innocence. On the other hand, the complainant's lawyer, Shehzad Bhatti, announced that the bail decision would be challenged in the Lahore High Court (LHC).