
Punjab opposition slams police raids ahead of Aug 5 protest
The Opposition in the Punjab Assembly on Wednesday strongly condemned police raids on the residences of its MPAs and the alleged harassment of their families ahead of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf's (PTI) countrywide protest on August 5.
As the assembly session began under the chair of Acting Speaker Malik Zaheer Iqbal Channer, Deputy Opposition Leader Muhammad Moeenuddin Riaz raised the issue on a point of order, expressing serious concern over what he termed as a preemptive crackdown.
'There are still many days left in August 5, but the police officials have already started conducting raids at the residences of our MPAs,' he said.
'It is regrettable that the families of our MPAs and workers are also being harassed by Punjab police,' he added, demanding the law minister take immediate notice of the situation.
Read More: LHC suspends by-poll schedule for NA-175
Riaz also voiced disappointment over the delay in forming a committee to investigate an earlier incident involving an attack and the use of abusive language against Opposition MPAs by the private guards of treasury lawmakers.
However, Provincial Minister for Parliamentary Affairs Mian Mujtaba Shujaur Rehman appeared unaware of the raids. 'It is not in my knowledge,' he said, while assuring the House that he would contact senior police officials and the Home Department to obtain more information.
Later, Opposition MPA Tayyab Rashid raised concerns about the illegal human organ trade, alleging that a kidney transplantation racket was operating in Sheikhupura 'under the nose of Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz.'
He criticised the government for targeting the Opposition instead of addressing pressing issues affecting the public. 'The government should de-focus from the Opposition and do something for the needy masses,' he said.
Also Read: District hospitals to offer angioplasty
PPP MPA Qazi Ahmad Saeed also spoke on the floor, highlighting an alleged water theft scandal. He claimed that influential individuals were diverting canal water to their own lands, leaving poor farmers helpless. 'They knocked the doors many times of concerned authorities, but their efforts proved futile,' he told the assembly.
From the treasury benches, MPA Amjad Ali Javed raised an issue regarding Higher Education Commission (HEC) policies, stating that new regulations were causing distress among computer science students.
He said the HEC had ruled that a computer science degree would not be considered valid without accreditation from a specific council.
'Students who have completed two semesters are now deeply concerned about the issue,' Javed noted. He urged the HEC to review and relax the policy in the interest of students' futures.
Hashtags

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


Business Recorder
27 minutes ago
- Business Recorder
Tarar seeks to defend convictions of PTI lawmakers
ISLAMABAD: The National Assembly grew tense on Monday as Federal Information Minister Attaullah Tarar strongly defended the convictions of opposition PTI lawmakers in the May 9 cases, drawing sharp criticism from the opposition and reigniting partisan tensions. Tarar, speaking during a session held to honour the late opposition lawmaker Mian Muhammad Azhar of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI), who died last month, defended the recent sentences handed down to PTI-linked rioters, calling them 'fully justified' following trials that spanned 15 months. The remarks angered lawmakers from PTI, who accused the minister of injecting politics into a session intended to honour Azhar, a veteran politician widely respected across party lines. Tarar, for his part, remained tight-lipped in the face of the backlash. 'Make up your mind, Minister, but stop playing courtroom cheerleader,' retorted PTI stalwart Latif Khosa, accusing Tarar of turning a memorial session into a partisan stage. Khosa slammed the minister for 'secretly' visiting Azhar's grieving son, Hammad Azhar, yet refusing to drop what PTI calls a politically motivated case against him. 'How long will politicians keep playing puppets for unelected powers,' he thundered, slamming pro-establishment antics that, according to him, poison the country's fragile democracy. Despite the drama, tributes continued to pour in for the late Azhar, a rare unifying figure in the country's polarised politics. Speaker Ayaz Sadiq, with a sombre tone, revealed he had stayed in regular contact with Azhar during his final 16 months. Defence Minister Khawaja Asif, usually a PTI critic, called Azhar a 'man of principle' who never indulged in dirty politics even after parting ways with PML-N. 'He was the only PTI lawmaker who crossed the aisle to shake hands with us,' Asif added. 'That takes guts and grace.' Former Prime Minister Raja Pervaiz Ashraf called Azhar 'a gentleman in a toxic game,' while MQM's Farooq Sattar praised his adherence to the now-rare 'golden rules of decent politics.' In an emotional moment, PTI's Amir Dogar reminded the House of Azhar's resilience – taking his son's place in Parliament after Hammad Azhar was barred from the 2024 elections due to 9 May allegations. But the real gut punch came when Dogar described how Azhar – a septuagenarian statesman – was manhandled by police outside Adiala Jail during a peaceful protest for Imran Khan. 'That image will haunt our democracy,' Dogar said, his voice cracking. 'A stain we may never wash off.' Law and Justice Minister Azam Nazeer Tarar said the information minister should have refrained from raising the issue of convictions, emphasising that the moment called for moving beyond confrontational politics. At the same time, he urged PTI lawmakers to reflect on the past, recalling how Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif was not permitted to attend his mother's funeral during Imran Khan's tenure. He also paid tribute to the late Mian Muhammad Azhar, noting his personal ties with the deceased. PTI members like Sherhryar Afridi and Ali Muhammad Khan joined the chorus of praise, united in grief over a political elder who, regardless of party, was seen as a symbol of civility in an increasingly brutal arena. PTI lawmakers attended the session and placed pictures of the party's recently disqualified MNAs – including opposition leader in the National Assembly Omar Ayub, Abdul Latif, Sahibzada Hamid Raza, Jamshed Dasti, Zartaj Gul, and Rai Hassan Nawaz – on their seats. Copyright Business Recorder, 2025


Business Recorder
an hour ago
- Business Recorder
Beyond flags and fireworks: unfinished task of economic independence
As Pakistan marks its 78th Independence Day, we are called to celebrate not only the birth of a sovereign state but also to reflect, honestly and urgently, on the unfinished business of our independence: economic freedom. For while flags will fly and anthems will rise this August 14th, the sobering reality remains that true independence continues to elude us — not for want of patriotism or potential, but for lack of economic self-reliance, policy clarity, and structural reform. Today, the average Pakistani citizen is burdened under the weight of rising costs, stunted wages, and dwindling opportunities. Our economy continues to rely heavily on external debt, concessional aid, and remittance-fuelled consumption. The vision of an independent, self-sustaining Pakistan — one that was so passionately articulated by Quaid-e-Azam — remains hostage to our inability to transform political will into bold economic choices. Nowhere is our economic entrapment more obvious than in our energy sector. Pakistan has among the highest electricity tariffs in the region — averaging around PKR 50 per unit for residential consumers as of mid-2025 — largely due to capacity payments, inefficiencies in transmission, and the perennial monster of circular debt, which has ballooned to nearly PKR 2.4 trillion. In the petroleum sector too, a distorted pricing mechanism, excessive taxes, systemic leakages and reliance on expensive imported fuel have distorted both consumption and investment decisions. Our taxation regime is similarly punitive and misaligned. Over 60 percent of tax revenue is collected through indirect means, disproportionately impacting the lower and middle classes, while leaving large segments of the elite sectors under-taxed. Agriculture, real estate, and wholesale and retail trade — which together contribute over 35 percent of GDP — continue to largely operate outside the documented economy. It is no surprise then that both local entrepreneurs and foreign investors remain wary of committing capital in a system so burdened by policy uncertainty and inequity. Amidst this stagnation, however, ordinary Pakistanis — both households and businesses — are quietly taking matters into their own hands. Solar panel imports surged to over USD 1.4 billion in FY24 alone, a clear signal that grid defection is no longer a future risk but a present-day reality. Entire housing societies are moving off-grid, factories are turning to hybrid solar-wind setups, and a quiet revolution in distributed energy is already underway. Yet policy continues to lag. We persist in funnelling scarce public resources into subsidizing a broken grid instead of embracing deregulation. Our energy strategies remain locked in supply-side interventions — more power plants, messed up LNG — while the real opportunity lies in enabling open access, competitive retail supply, and genuine consumer choice. Without a massive deregulation drive, we risk ending up with stranded assets and an obsolete grid infrastructure, all while consumers increasingly opt out of the system altogether. The establishment of the Special Investment Facilitation Council (SIFC) has created a unique opportunity — perhaps the most credible institutional innovation in decades — to drive cross-sectoral economic reform through a whole-of-the-government approach. It has brought together civilian ministries, provincial governments, and the military in an unprecedented framework aimed at facilitating investment and cutting through bureaucratic red tape. But institutions, no matter how robust, are only as effective as the political choices that back them. If there was ever a moment to take politically difficult yet economically necessary decisions — whether in power pricing, SOE divestiture, or tax reform — it is now. We must act while there is alignment at the top and a rare confluence of national interest and political pragmatism. As global supply chains diversify and capital seeks new destinations offering both stability and return, Pakistan cannot afford to hesitate. Geopolitically, the tide may finally be turning in our favour. The evolving contours of US trade policy — particularly in a potential post-Trump tariff recalibration — present Pakistan with an opening to expand its exports. With India's trade relationship with the US occasionally strained, and Bangladesh approaching graduation from the Generalized System of Preferences (GSP), Pakistan's textile sector in particular could gain significant ground if supported by a coherent government-to-government and B2B engagement strategy. Pakistan's textile exports to the US crossed USD 5.1 billion in FY24 — a respectable figure, yet still far below our potential. For the fiscal year ending June 2025, exports to the US further rose to around USD 6.03 billion — a 10.7 percent year-on-year increase. If we harmonize the energies of private exporters and government facilitators — particularly by improving compliance with ESG standards, traceability, and labour practices — we could aspire to double this figure over the medium term. Likewise, our IT and Business Process Outsourcing (BPO) sectors, growing at 15 percent annually, need strategic policy support to capture the expanding demand for nearshore digital services in North America. The real challenge, as always, lies in execution. We know what needs to be done: broaden the tax base, deregulate energy, divest loss-making SOEs, digitize governance, and bet on competitive sectors. What we lack is not diagnosis but daring — the courage to prioritize long-term gain over short-term optics, to build national consensus beyond partisanship, and to tell the people the truth: that there is no prosperity without reform, no dignity without documentation, and no independence without economic resilience. We cannot afford to waste another decade in denial. Pakistan's median age is 20.6 years. This generation is connected, conscious, and impatient. They will not be pacified with slogans. They want results — in employment, in energy bills, in upward mobility. If we fail to deliver, we risk a deeper crisis of confidence in the state and its institutions. But if we succeed — if we seize this moment, reform boldly, and act together — we can finally earn the economic independence we have been chasing since 1947. We can become not just a nuclear power, but a functional economy. Not just a strategic location, but a strategic supplier. Not just a state with borders, but a state with purpose. On this Independence Day, let us not merely commemorate our freedom — let us commit to completing it. Copyright Business Recorder, 2025


Business Recorder
2 hours ago
- Business Recorder
Fight against terrorism: Minister urges KP, Balochistan to fulfill their responsibilities
ISLAMABAD: Minister of State for Interior Talal Chaudhry on Monday issued a stern warning to the provincial governments of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan, urging them to fulfill their responsibilities in the fight against terrorism, and cautioning that continued 'irresponsible conduct' would no longer be tolerated. Speaking at a Youm-e-Shuhada (Martyrs' Day) ceremony held at the Islamabad Police Headquarters, Chaudhry said that while Pakistan's security forces are fully equipped to combat terrorism, a successful fight requires strong political support. 'Security forces are fulfilling their responsibilities, but I want to tell the provincial governments of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan, where terrorism is on the rise, to fulfil their political responsibility,' he said, adding that this cannot happen that on the one hand, our security forces and ordinary citizens are offering sacrifices on a daily basis and the provincial governments do not fulfill their responsibilities. The minister warned the governments of both the provinces to fulfill their responsibilities as their 'irresponsible conduct' would not be acceptable any further. Chaudhry said that at present, terrorism is again on the rise in the country. 'Pakistan has suffered 90,000 casualties, including security personnel, citizens and people from every walk of life,' he said, adding that these 90,000 sacrifices were made for ensuring peace and security in Pakistan. He said that Pakistan is fighting terrorism as the frontline state, and if Pakistan failed to combat terrorism, it would have broader implications for regional and global security. The minister further said that the Iranian president assured Pakistan that they will fight terrorism jointly, and this will help in improving the situation in Pakistan. He said that Pakistan is holding talks with Afghanistan regarding terrorism; therefore, Afghanistan also needs to fulfil its responsibility as a neighbour. He said the present government has ended the disparity of salaries between different security forces. Further steps will be taken for improving the capacity of the Islamabad Police and Federal Constabulary (FC), he said. Chaudhary has assured to provide all necessary resources, including modern weapons to the police force. He paid tribute to the services and sacrifices of the police personnel. There has been a reduction of over 50 percent in heinous crimes in the federal capital territory due to the efforts of the police, he claimed. Inspector General of Police (IGP) Syed Ali Nasir Rizvi and other senior officials of police also attended the event. Copyright Business Recorder, 2025