PPP, PML-N parted ways due to conflict of interests: Sh Rashid
ISLAMABAD: Referring to an apparent collapse of the multiparty opposition alliance, Interior Minister Sheikh Rashid Ahmed said on Monday that both the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) and Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) had parted ways from the Pakistan Democratic Movement (PDM) due to conflict of interests.
Addressing a news conference after inaugurating the Quaid-i-Azam’s rehabilitated portrait at the Islamabad Expressway, which collapsed due to overnight rain last year, he said both the parties had remained arch political rivals in the past but made the alliance under the PDM's banner only to oust Prime Minister Imran Khan.
He claimed that their political moves posed no threat to the government of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf, which had already completed its three years successfully. The minister said the government had nothing to do with the infighting of the PDM’s component parties, rather it happened due to their own incompetency. "It led to visible cracks deep inside the opposition alliance.”
He urged the opposition parties to support the government in the parliament for major reforms including political, legal, electoral and municipal reforms for the development of the country.
Sheikh Rashid regarded Prime Minister Imran Khan as ‘the skipper of politics’ and expressed his resolve for supporting him through all the thick and thin. The minister said the prime focus of the government was to address the basic issues of the masses such as inflation, adding, “Imran Khan sticks to his stance against corruption as the people of the country wanted full recovery of the looted money.”
He said it was the first time in the history of Pakistan that a ruling government would be issuing 100,000 National Identity Cards (NIC) across the country. The mobile vans of the National Database and Registration Authority (Nadra) would reach each district of the country for registration of citizens, he added.
He vowed to transform Islamabad into a ‘city of parks and gardens’ by rooting out the land mafia in the federal capital. The glory of federal capital would be restored during the tenure of the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf government, the minister maintained.
At present, he said some five big and 231 small parks existed in the capital city, adding each of them would be renovated after 15 days of interval. He said a multipurpose sports park would be built around the Quaid's portrait, which was re-erected on a hillock along the Express Highway near Koral Interchange, after its fencing. The site would be developed within a short span of time to provide recreational opportunities to the passerby, he added.
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