Gulf News

PM decries removals from office ordered by courts

ABBASI DARES SENATE CHAIRMAN TO DECLARE THAT HE DID NOT BUY ANY VOTES

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You made a decision in 2008 and you got Asif Ali Zardari, and what he did to Pakistan, you all know. But in 2013 you sent him back home; this was the people’s decision.”

Shahid Khaqan Abbasi | Pakistan Prime Minister

Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi yesterday called for “political decisions to be taken in polling booths, not in courts” as he took another dig at PML-N’s rivals for getting the party’s former president Nawaz Sharif disqualifi­ed and ousted from the PM office.

The PM’s remarks come in the wake of his recent meeting with Chief Justice (CJP) Saqib Nisar — a rendezvous that had raised many eyebrows in political circles.

The meeting, and Justice Nisar’s subsequent referring of the PM as a supplicant, had also irked Sharif, who later publicly asked the prime minister to explain his position on the meeting.

“Let the voters make political decisions,” the prime minister stated while addressing a crowd in Dera Ghazi Khan today. “Political decisions are taken in polling booths, not courts.”

“It is a strange tradition that whosoever solves the country’s problems is dragged into the courts, removed from posts and attempts are made to push [him] away from the people,” he said.

“This tradition is not Pakistan’s tradition. This tradition will not give respect to politics in Pakistan,” he warned.

The prime minister said the decisions of the people always prevail over court verdicts — some of which, he claimed, are controvers­ial or not accepted by history.

“We continued to work despite severe opposition and gave respect to your vote,” PM Abbasi told his audience, outlining his party’s achievemen­ts since it reclaimed power at federal level in 2013.

“You made a decision in 2008 and you got Asif Ali Zardari, and what he did to Pakistan, you all know. But in 2013 you sent him back home; this was the people’s decision,” Abbasi said, explaining how democratic systems discards the underperfo­rming.

“The people then chose Nawaz Sharif, whose era saw unpreceden­ted developmen­t.

“I have complete faith that the enlightene­d people of Pakistan will respond to the conspiraci­es and overthrow of government­s at the polling stations [in 2018 General Elections].”

‘Chairman Senate should clarify he did not buy votes’

Senate elections

The PM dedicated a large part of his speech to the recent Senate elections, which saw some dark horses triumph amid allegation­s of horsetradi­ng.

“I want to ask you whether those people who pay to come to the Senate should become Senators,” Abbasi said, undeterred by strong criticism by the opposition on his previous remarks about Sadiq Sanjrani’s election as the Senate chairman.

The PM had, at recent public gatherings, expressed his concerns over the election of the Senate chairman and said there was a need to elect a consensus chairman of the upper house of the parliament, as it reflected the federation.

“Should the chairman of the upper house be someone who has reached there after buying votes?” he asked today. “Can the house, which has its foundation based on corruption, work for the benefit of Pakistan?”

He demanded that his political opponents “do another press conference and tell the people that ‘we did not spend money to get Senators elected’”.

PM Abbasi also defended his previous remarks about the procedure of Senate elections as well as horse-trading. “Some people said that the prime minister should not interfere in matters of the Senate. I said that I will continue to interfere until the last breath and I feel that ending this vice [horse-trading] is Jihad.”

“The Senate chair should also give a statement that ‘I did not buy any Senator to become chairman Senate’,” he urged.

He said that a country where sham lawmakers occupy top posts can never develop. “I feel that it is my duty to put this vice in front of the people for them to decide for themselves.”

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