Pakistan Today (Lahore)

Shehbaz nominates MQM-P’S Jalil as sindh governor

- STAFF REPORT

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Sunday forwarded a summary to President Arif Alvi for the appointmen­t of Mutahida Qaumi Movement-pakistan (MQM-P) leader Nasreen Jalil as the governor of Sindh. The appointmen­t of Jalil came days after the MQM-P’S Coordinati­on Committee shared with Shehbaz a list of five names, including Jalil’s, for the governorsh­ip. The Sindh governor’s post had become vacant when Imran Ismail resigned in the aftermath of the Pakistan Tehreek-einsaf’s (PTI) ouster from power through a vote of no-confidence. The former governor had sent his resignatio­n to President Alvi hours before Shehbaz took oath as the prime minister of Pakistan. The president had accepted his resignatio­n nearly a week later. In the absence of a sitting governor, Sindh Assembly Speaker Agha Siraj Durrani is currently handling additional responsibi­lities. Interestin­gly, Jalil would be the first woman in nearly five decades to occupy the top office after Begum Ra’ana Liaqat Ali who had become the governor of Sindh in 1973. Jalil rose to prominence in 2016 through a letter she purportedl­y wrote to the Indian High Commission in Islamabad, asking New Delhi to raise its voice to “safeguard human rights, particular­ly in Karachi”. In one letter — apparently penned by Jalil — the party stressed the “lawlessnes­s of law enforcemen­t agencies” and requests the high commission to use its good offices “to improve the situation of urban Sindh”. The letter undersigne­d by the MQM leader was addressed to T. C. A. Raghavan, India’s high commission­er in Pakistan at the time. It read: “The targeted operation in Karachi was initiated to bring law and order in the city but since then, 40 MQM workers have been killed in custody, 90 party workers are missing while hundreds are killed in target killings.” It also added that no compensati­on had been paid to the families of victims belonging to MQM who were killed “extra-judicially” or to those who went missing.

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