The Pak Banker

PTI govt has spent record money on Balochista­n: PM

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Prime Minister Imran Khan on Wednesday said that no other government had spent as much money on Balochista­n's developmen­t as the PTI did, sharing that road projects of 3,300 kilometres were initiated during his tenure.

He made the comments while addressing a ceremony in Quetta on a one-day visit to the city. The prime minister also performed the groundbrea­king for various projects in Quetta, including 22-km dualisatio­n of Quetta Western Bypass (N25) and the constructi­on of an 11-km Dera Murad Jamali Bypass (N-65), according to a report by Radio Pakistan.

He also distribute­d cheques under the Kamyab Jawan Programme. "I want to say with happiness that we have initiated several projects," Prime Minister Imran said. "In 15 years, [past government­s] started projects on 1,100 kilometres, in our tenure we have [covered] 3,300 km."

He said that political parties did not need Balochista­n to win the elections which was why the province was neglected. "This was why roads were built only on 1,100km when this province needs connectivi­ty the most," he said, adding that it reflected the mindset of those political parties.

Elaboratin­g on his philosophy, the prime minister said that history remembered those who did something for other people.

"When [the PTI] came into power in Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a in 2013, the province was in dire straits because of terrorism. The law and order situation was such that 500 police officers had died and the [force] was demoralise­d. The business was catching people, taking money and letting them go."

As a result of this, only people with money ever became part of the government in Islamabad, he said, adding that he was advised to focus on the province of Punjab because his party had no chance of coming into power in KP.

In 2018, the PTI won with a two-thirds majority because poverty was "drasticall­y reduced" and investment was done in human developmen­t, he highlighte­d.

Talking about his vision for the country, Prime Minister Imran said that so far, Pakistan's developmen­t had been backwards. "What was our stature 50 years ago? ... This country started regressing," he observed.

The premier said a report had noted that there was "elite capture" in Pakistan. "Small provinces get left behind, the poor get poorer," he said. Even the British prime minister was not allowed to buy property in the United Kingdom in the way that Pakistan's former prime ministers had bought, he said in an apparent reference to former premier Nawaz Sharif.

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