Maryam Nawaz Sharif makes history after getting elected as Pakistan’s first woman chief minister

Update Maryam Nawaz Sharif makes history after getting elected as Pakistan’s first woman chief minister
Maryam Nawaz, newly elected chief minister of a Pakistani province, Punjab, arrives to attend provincial assembly session, in Lahore, Pakistan, on Feb. 26, 2024. (AP)
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Updated 26 February 2024
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Maryam Nawaz Sharif makes history after getting elected as Pakistan’s first woman chief minister

Maryam Nawaz Sharif makes history after getting elected as Pakistan’s first woman chief minister
  • Maryam Nawaz Sharif secures 220 votes as opposition boycotts voting altogether in protest 
  • Chief minister of Punjab’s post is arguably second-most important political appointment in Pakistan

ISLAMABAD: Maryam Nawaz Sharif, the daughter of three-time former prime minister Nawaz Sharif, made history on Monday after she was elected as the first woman chief minister of a Pakistani province, Punjab, the country’s most prosperous, populous and politically important region.

The Punjab Assembly’s session, which kicked off at 11:00 a.m. local time, was marred by protests by legislators of the Sunni Ittehad Council, which features members of former prime minister Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party. SIC legislators had walked out earlier during the day after the party’s nominee for chief minister, Rana Aftab Ahmad Khan, was not allowed to speak by the speaker. 

After the counting of votes concluded, Punjab Assembly Speaker Malik Muhammad Ahmad Khan announced that Maryam had polled 220 votes while Aftab did not secure a single vote, as SIC legislators boycotted voting altogether. 

“As per the rules of procedure of the provincial assembly of Punjab, Maryam Nawaz Sharif has been declared as the elected chief minister of Punjab,” the speaker said to thunderous applause from the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) legislators. 

In her first speech as Punjab’s chief minister, Maryam said she was the chief executive for all legislators of the assembly, including those that hadn’t voted for her. 

“I have faced numerous hardships, including incarceration in a death cell, but I am grateful to my opponents for providing me with rigorous training to become what I am today,” she said. 

“There will be no vendetta against anyone.”

Outlining her agenda for Punjab, Maryam said she would implement her plan to improve people’s lives from her first day in office. 

“Provision of jobs, improving health facilities, and solving public issues will start from today, right after this session,” she said. 

Maryam assured the assembly that she harbored “zero tolerance” for corruption, vowing to implement an effective governance model that sees the timely completion of projects and delivery of exemplary services to the masses. 

Maryam said she would upgrade the province’s basic health units and ensure that every district in Punjab was equipped with a state-of-the-art hospital.

“Medicines will be provided in emergency wards of all government hospital across Punjab,” she said, announcing that her government would launch Pakistan’s first air ambulance service in the province within a few days.

In the Feb. 8 national election, three-time former prime minister Nawaz Sharif’s PML-N won the highest 137 seats in Punjab. The PML-N has been joined by nearly two dozen independent members after the national polls. 

The Punjab Assembly is the largest elected house in the country, with 371 seats, comprising 297 general seats and 74 reserved seats, including 66 for women and eight for minorities.

A party requires 186 members to form the government in Punjab.

The province of more than 127 million people, over half of Pakistan’s population, is the heartland of the nation’s political, military and industrial elite. Historically, the party that secures a stronghold in Punjab often manages to form the government at the center.

Last week, the PML-N managed to have its candidates, Malik Ahmed Khan and Zaheer Iqbal Channar, elected as speaker and deputy speaker of the provincial assembly, respectively.

Maryam, 50, plays an influential role in her father’s PML-N party and has been presented by him as his political heir apparent. She is senior vice president of the party.

Prior to entering politics, Maryam was involved with the Sharif family’s philanthropic organizations and served as the chairperson of the Sharif Trust, Sharif Medical City, and Sharif Education Institutes. She formally joined politics in 2012 when she was put in charge of the PML-N’s election campaign ahead of 2013 general elections, which the party won, propelling her father to the prime minister’s office for the third time.

After the elections, she was appointed the Chairperson of the Prime Minister’s Youth Programme, a position from which she resigned in 2014 after her appointment was criticized by political rival Imran Khan over nepotism and her university degree was challenged in the Lahore High Court.

She became more politically active in 2017 after her father was disqualified from the PM’s office and convicted by the Supreme Court of Pakistan in relation to corruption revelations in the Panama Papers. She campaigned for her mother, Kulsoom Nawaz, during by-elections for Sharif’s vacant seat in the NA-120 constituency in Lahore.

Maryam was convicted by an anti-graft court in 2018 and got seven years in jail in a corruption abetment case involving the purchase of high-end apartments in London. Her father was also sentenced to 10 years in prison in the case for not being able to disclose a known source of income for buying the properties. She was also disqualified from contesting in 2018 elections as convicted felons cannot run for office under Pakistani law.

Maryam was acquitted in the case in September 2022, months after Imran Khan was ousted from the PM’s office in a parliamentary vote of no confidence and her uncle Shehbaz Sharif became premier.

Maryam became increasingly involved in politics during her father’s four-year self-imposed exile in the United Kingdom and in 2019, was appointed vice president of the PML-N, leading significant anti-government rallies throughout the country and fiercely denouncing then-PM Khan, his PTI party and the military and judiciary for colluding to oust her father from the PM’s office.

On 3 January 2023, Maryam was appointed senior vice president of the PML-N, making her one of the party’s most senior leaders. She ran for two seats in the Feb. 8 general elections, for the National Assembly seat from NA-119 Lahore-III and for a seat of the Provincial Assembly of Punjab from PP-159 Lahore-XV. This was her first time contesting a general election. She won both seats and was nominated by her party as the candidate for Punjab CM.

Maryam’s candidacy as the first woman chief minister of Pakistan represents a significant milestone, coming over seven decades after Pakistan’s creation. The post is arguably the second most important political appointment in the country, following the prime minister.
Maryam also courted controversy before entering politics.

When she failed to get admission into Lahore’s elite Kinnaird College due to poor academic standing, her father, then chief minister of Punjab, had the principal suspended from duty. A strike by the college students and staff got the principal reinstated. 

Maryam later enrolled at Lahore’s King Edward Medical College in the late 1980s but had to leave due to a controversy over illegal admission.

In 1992, she married Safdar Awan at the age of 19, who was serving as a captain in the Pakistan Army at the time and was the security officer of Nawaz Sharif during his then tenure as PM. The couple have three children.


In blow to ex-PM Khan, Pakistan top court restores changes to accountability laws

In blow to ex-PM Khan, Pakistan top court restores changes to accountability laws
Updated 31 sec ago
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In blow to ex-PM Khan, Pakistan top court restores changes to accountability laws

In blow to ex-PM Khan, Pakistan top court restores changes to accountability laws
  • Sharif-led coalition government had limited accountability bureau’s jurisdiction to cases involving over Rs500 million corruption
  • Ex-premier Khan challenged the amendments, court rules Khan had failed to prove the amendments were unconstitutional

ISLAMABAD: The Supreme Court of Pakistan on Friday restored amendments to the country’s anti-graft laws approved in 2022 and accepted the federal government’s appeal against a court judgment last year that had struck down the changes passed by parliament.
The Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif-led coalition government made changes to the country’s accountability laws through the National Accountability (Amendment) Act, 2022. The amendments limited the National Accountability Bureau’s (NAB) jurisdiction to cases involving corruption of over Rs500 million, reduced the term of the chairman of the bureau and prosecutor general to three years and transferred all pending inquiries, investigations and trials to other authorities.
Imran Khan, who had at the time recently been ousted as prime minister through a vote of no-confidence in parliament, petitioned the top court against the amendments, claiming they were made to benefit the influential, including top politicians, and would legitimize corruption in the country. In September last year, the Supreme Court, led by then Chief Justice Umar Ata Bandial, ordered the restoration of corruption cases against public office holders that were withdrawn after amendments in the anti-graft law came into effect. 
The federal government led by PM Sharif and other parties filed intra-court appeals against the judgment, which were accepted by a five-member Supreme Court bench led by the current chief justice, Qazi Faez Isa, restoring all the changes to the accountability law.
“We allow these appeals by setting aside the impugned judgment, and dismiss the petition,” the Supreme Court said in a 16-page judgment on Friday.
The judgment said Khan had failed to prove that amendments made to the accountability law were unconstitutional. 
“We are also not persuaded by Mr. Niazi [Khan] and learned Senior Advocate Khawaja Haris Ahmed that the Amendments violated the Constitution,” the court said.
The judgment noted the amendments had not “criminalized any offense” and had “only changed what may be investigated by NAB itself and the forum of the criminal trial.”
“No person can be adversely affected with regard to such procedural changes,” the judgment said.


Family pardons suspect in headline-grabbing hit-and-run killing of two in Karachi

Family pardons suspect in headline-grabbing hit-and-run killing of two in Karachi
Updated 10 min 45 sec ago
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Family pardons suspect in headline-grabbing hit-and-run killing of two in Karachi

Family pardons suspect in headline-grabbing hit-and-run killing of two in Karachi
  • Wife of man killed calls incident “unfortunate accident,” says affidavit submitted in court without any pressure, force, enticement
  • Deals that involve “blood money” paid as compensation to victims’ families are common under Pakistan’s criminal code

KARACHI: The family of a father-daughter duo who were killed in a headline-grabbing hit-and-run accident in Karachi last month have pardoned the main suspect Natasha Danish, according to an affidavit released to the media on Friday.
The case sparked widespread public and media outrage, with people alleging the police were not investigating it properly as the suspect was from a wealthy and influential family. 
CCTV footage of the accident was widely circulated on social media, showing a Toyota Land Cruiser allegedly driven by Iqbal hitting a motorbike, killing a woman and her father. Five others were also injured in the incident. The vehicle’s alleged driver is the wife of well-known businessman Danish Iqbal. She is the CEO of Metro Capital (Private) Limited and JSDN Electric Limited, two companies owned by her husband under the Metro Power business group.
Iqbal’s lawyers initially used long-term psychiatric treatment as a defense but the suspect’s urine sample later tested positive for methamphetamine or ‘ice.’ 
“I, Romana Imran, widow of Imran Arif [...] do hereby state on oath. I say that we face amicable patch-up with the matter and I being the widow of the deceased have forgiven the above-mentioned accused person Natasha Danish and Muhammad Danish Iqbal in the name of Almighty Allah who is very kind and merciful,” the affidavit submitted in court and seen by Arab News said. 
Bearing Imran’s signature, the affidavit quoted her as saying she had no objection if the court granted bail to Iqbal as the “unfortunate” incident was an “unintentional accident.” Romana said she was filing the affidavit “without any pressure, force, compulsion, coercion and enticement.” 
Although the affidavit did not mention if any money exchanged hands, deals that involve “blood money,” called diyat, as compensation paid to victims’ families are a common and accepted practice in Islamic law and Pakistan’s criminal code.


Pakistan team to participate in World Youth Scrabble Championship this week

Pakistan team to participate in World Youth Scrabble Championship this week
Updated 33 min 22 sec ago
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Pakistan team to participate in World Youth Scrabble Championship this week

Pakistan team to participate in World Youth Scrabble Championship this week
  • Pakistan won 2022 championship but finished second behind Sri Lanka in 2023 championship played in Thailand
  • Pakistan team led by Tariq Pervez, director Youth Program of Pakistan Scrabble Association, comprises 12 boys and 4 girls

ISLAMABAD: A 14-member Pakistan team will compete in the 19th World Youth Scrabble Championship to be played in Sri Lanka from September 6-8 this week, state news agency APP said on Friday.
Pakistan was the winner of the 2022 championship but finished second behind Sri Lanka in the 2023 championship played in Thailand.
“The team led by Tariq Pervez, Director Youth Program of Pakistan Scrabble Association, comprises 12 boys and 4 girls,” APP said on the 2024 Pakistan team.
The first World Youth Scrabble Championships were held in Wollongong, Australia 2006. Competitors from Australia, Bahrain, Canada, England, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Kenya, Kuwait, Malaysia, New Zealand, Nigeria, Oman, Pakistan, Philippines, Qatar, Singapore, South Africa, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Trinidad and Tobago, United Arab Emirates and United States have competed in the annual tournament so far. 
WYSC is open to anyone under the age of 18 on January 1 of the year of each tournament. So far the WYSC tournament has been held in Malaysia five times, Australia twice, Dubai twice and the Philippines, Sri Lanka, and the United Kingdom once each.


India’s far-right Hindus seek to drive Muslims out of ‘holy land’

India’s far-right Hindus seek to drive Muslims out of ‘holy land’
Updated 54 min 20 sec ago
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India’s far-right Hindus seek to drive Muslims out of ‘holy land’

India’s far-right Hindus seek to drive Muslims out of ‘holy land’
  • Uttarakhand known for Hindu pilgrimage sites, only 13% of state’s 10 million people are Muslim, according to 2011 census 
  • Anti-Islam “army” of several hundred men believes Muslims are conspiring to seize Hindu women, land and businesses 

HARIDWAR, India: A year after extremists forced Muslim neighbors from their homes in India, victims live in despair as their tormentors seek to drive Islam from what they consider a Hindu “holy land.”
Mohammad Salim shudders when he remembers the campaign that erupted in May 2023 against his Muslim minority community in Purola, a seemingly sleepy town surrounded by forested hills in the northern state of Uttarakhand.
“If I had not escaped that day, they would have killed me along with my family,” said Salim, 36, a married father of three young daughters.
Salim, whose clothes shop was looted, now lives in basic accommodation with his family around 100 kilometers (60 miles) away in the city of Haridwar, struggling to make ends meet.
Rakesh Tomar, 38, is one of those who celebrated his departure.
The hard-line Hindu nationalist activist, based in state capital Dehradun, spouts hate-filled rhetoric against a minority he feels threatens him.
“Uttarakhand is the holy land of Hindus,” Tomar said, referring to the shrines around the sacred headwaters of the Ganges river in the state, an area larger than Switzerland.

In this photograph taken on August 6, 2024, activist and Hindu right-wing group Rudra Sena’s founder Rakesh Tomar (2R), speaks to people in Dehradun. (AFP)

“We will not let it become an Islamic state under any circumstances, even if we have to sacrifice our lives for it.”
Only 13 percent of Uttarakhand’s 10 million people are Muslim, according to the last census in 2011.
Much of the hatred last year was fueled by “love-jihad” conspiracies, claiming predatory Muslim men wanted to seduce Hindu women to convert them.
Crude but effective, they are shared widely online, poisoning centuries of relative harmony in the area.
Many were shared by activists like Tomar, supporters of the ruling Hindu-nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) of Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
The BJP’s nationalist rhetoric has left India’s Muslim population of more than 220 million fearful for their future. The BJP denies it is anti-Muslim. 
Tomar sees himself on a frontline to stop what he alleges are Muslim efforts to take trade from Hindu businesses.
“We have started an initiative where Hindu shopkeepers put nameplates outside their shops so that Hindus buy goods from them,” he said.
“This economic boycott will curb ‘trade jihad’ waged by Muslims.”
It is a tried and tested tactic.
In Purola last year, the attacks on Muslims were preceded by a poster campaign plastered on Muslim homes and businesses telling them to leave.
Crowds demanded the “forced migration of Muslims” out of Purola, where some 500 Muslims had made up five percent of an otherwise Hindu town of some 10,000 people.
At first, Salim thought he would be safe.

In this photograph taken on August 7, 2024, Mohammad Salim, who fled religious persecution at the hands of Hindu extremists, speaks during an interview with AFP on the roof of a rented accommodation in Haridwar. (AFP)

He had been born in the town — his father moved there half a century ago — and was old friends with his Hindu neighbors.
He was also a local leader of the BJP’s Minority Front — non-Hindu supporters of the party.
But months of online hate speech had divided old friends.
“I was threatened with death,” Salim said, adding his shop was looted and the building vandalized — losing assets he totalled at some $60,000.
“People said, ‘You should leave the town quickly or these people will kill you’.”
He and his family fled that night, among some 200 other Muslims driven out. Only a few have returned.
Tomar, a full-time activist who heads a self-described anti-Islam “army” of several hundred men, believes his Muslim neighbors are conspiring to seize Hindu women, land and businesses — none of which he can provide evidence to justify.
He spoke to AFP on a break from a meeting of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), whose millions of members conduct paramilitary drills and prayer meetings.
The RSS campaigns for India to be declared a Hindu nation — rather than a secular one, as enshrined in its constitution — and is the ideological parent of Modi’s BJP.
“If a Hindu nation is to be created, it is only possible under the BJP,” Tomar said.
More moderate voices say some of the hatred is driven by jealousy at the perceived business acumen of Muslim traders, with extremists seeking a scapegoat for failing finances.
Indresh Maikhuri, a Hindu and civil society activist based in Dehradun, said political leaders saw benefit in boosting their popularity by sowing division.
“Some people want to create a rift between Hindus and Muslims,” he said, warning the “humiliating and segregated treatment” would have “dire consequences.”
As for Salim, he dreams of home.
“This is my motherland,” he said. “Where will I go, leaving this land where I was born?“


Eight Pakistani firms showcase innovations at 24 Fintech 2024 exhibition in Riyadh

Eight Pakistani firms showcase innovations at 24 Fintech 2024 exhibition in Riyadh
Updated 06 September 2024
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Eight Pakistani firms showcase innovations at 24 Fintech 2024 exhibition in Riyadh

Eight Pakistani firms showcase innovations at 24 Fintech 2024 exhibition in Riyadh
  • Event helped to “promote and position Pakistani fintech companies globally,” Pakistan embassy in Riyadh says
  • Exhibition attracted 36,959 thousand attendees, more than 300 brands and over 350 investors at three-day event

ISLAMABAD: Eight leading fintech companies from Pakistan participated this week in the three-day 24 Fintech 2024 exhibition held in Riyadh where they “showcased their innovations and engaged with global industry leaders,” Islamabad’s embassy in Riyadh said in a statement on Thursday.
Several Pakistani fintech players have entered the scene in recent years, with a focus on digital payments, mobile wallets and e-commerce. The key players include payment platforms like JazzCash, Easypaisa, and PayPak, digital lending platforms like Finja and Tez Financial Services, and e-commerce platforms like Daraz and Shopsy. The State Bank of Pakistan has also launched initiatives to promote fintech, including a digital payments framework called RAAST.
However, with only 21 percent of Pakistan’s adult population included in the formal financial sector, fintechs face numerous challenges to realize their potential. With a limited talent supply and the population’s trust in cash, fintechs are struggling to offer innovative solutions to capture the unserved market and have limited sources of investments.
“The 24 Fintech 2024 exhibition held from 3-5 September 2024, celebrated the best in fintech and provided key opportunities for [Paksitani] companies to expand their reach and enhance their knowledge,” the Pakistan Embassy in Riyadh said on Thursday. 

Ahmad Farooq, Ambassador of Pakistan to Saudi Arabia, attends 24 Fintech 2024 exhibition in Riyadh on September 5, 2024. (Photo courtesy: Pakistan Embassy)

“Among the highlights was the participation of eight leading fintech companies from Pakistan, who showcased their innovations and engaged with global industry leaders.”
The exhibition also helped to “promote and position Pakistani fintech companies globally,” the statement added, without specifying which Pakistani firms participated in the event. 
Hosted by Saudi Arabia’s Financial Sector Development Program (FSDP), the Saudi Central Bank (SAMA), the Capital Market Authority (CMA), and the Insurance Authority (IA), the exhibition and summit enjoyed a three-day run at the Riyadh Front Exhibition and Conference Center from Sept. 3-5, attracting 36,959 thousand attendees, more than 300 brands, and over 350 investors.

Ahmad Farooq, Ambassador of Pakistan to Saudi Arabia, attends 24 Fintech 2024 exhibition in Riyadh on September 5, 2024. (Photo courtesy: Pakistan Embassy)