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Friday April 26, 2024

Will have to bow before law: Shahbaz

By our correspondents
May 27, 2018

By News desk

MUZAFFARGARH/LAHORE: Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif on Saturday said the National Accountability Bureau (NAB) was a constitutional institution which could summon anyone. The Bureau had summoned him previously and it could summon again, if it wanted to, he added.

He said Health Secretary Ali Jan was among the dedicated, hardworking and God-fearing officials, but attending the ceremony because of being summoned by NAB.

“NAB is a constitutional institution and it summoned me as well and I may be summoned again,” he said, adding, “We are to bow to law because only those nations prosperous which accept rule of law.”

About former president Asif Ali Zardari and PTI Chairman Imran Khan, Shahbaz said talking about Zardari was tantamount to wasting time. “Pakistan wasn’t made for Zardari’s looting and Imran’s sit-ins,” said he remarked.

The NAB has summoned Shahbaz in the Punjab Saaf Pani Company (PSPC) case and he is scheduled to appear before the anti-graft body on June 4. Sources within the NAB say a questionnaire has also been sent to Shahbaz who had had earlier appeared before NAB in the Ashiana-e-Iqbal Housing Scheme scam.

The chief minister was addressing the inauguration ceremony of Recep Tayyip Erdogan Hospital’s expansion in Muzaffargarh, after which the number of beds in the hospital has been increased to 380 from 140 at cost of Rs 1.8 billion.

Provincial cabinet members and lawmakers Khawaja Salman Rafique, Ahmed Yar Hanjra, Syed Haroon Sultan, Qaswar Karim Langrial and Mian Imran Qureshi as wells senior bureaucrats and others personalities were present on the occasion.

Earlier in the day, Shahbaz inaugurated CT scan machine, hepatitis filtration clinic and the trauma centre costing Rs 533 million at the DHQ Hospital Muzaffargarh. Shahbaz said if elected again, the PML-N in the next five years it would bring southern Punjab at par with central parts of the province. He said the Punjab government was committed to providing modern healthcare services to the masses, adding that the establishment of trauma centre in Muzaffargarh was a need of the hour.

“This hospital is a model for all medical institutions and the facilities of teaching hospital, medical college, nursing college and others will also be provided in the future. Patients from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Balochistan, Sindh and other areas also come here for treatment,” he noted.

Shahbaz paid rich tribute to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan for providing financial assistance for the modern hospital after the devastating floods which had created havoc in the area some years ago. He said more than Rs 90 billion had been spent on construction of new roads under the Punjab Chief Minister’s Rural Road Programme during the last five years. “When we came into the power the country was in the grip of energy crisis, but now we have overcome this problem by producing about 11,000 megawatts of electricity,” he noted.

“Punjab has installed four gas-powered plants which are producing 5,000-MW of electricity. These projects have been completed at the half cost of the Zardari government,” said Shahbaz.

“On the other hand, there is Mr Imran Niazi who followed the politics of sit-ins and allegations and did not execute work of even a single penny. I invite him to visit Muzaffargarh and see the hospital as we have finished difference between rich and poor.”