Muhammad Anwar: “This would help the ordinary people who really matter at the end of the day”
Pakistan’s prime minister is meeting opposition leaders in a bid to prevent a possible no-confidence vote after a key partner left the ruling coalition.
Yousuf Raza Gilani’s government faces losing its majority after the Muttahida Quami Movement (MQM) announcement on Sunday that it will go into opposition.
The MQM accuses the government of poor performance, specially on corruption and the economy.
Elections may have to be held if the government cannot find new partners.
Mr Gilani denied on Sunday that his government was in any danger of collapsing, saying on television: “I don’t see any crisis.”
The MQM, the second largest party in the coalition, withdrew two ministers from the federal cabinet last week.
A smaller coalition partner, the Jamiat-i-Ulema Islam party, pulled out last month after one of its ministers was sacked.
Pakistan’s governing coalition held 181 seats – including the MQM’s 25 – in the 342-member parliament.
The MQM’s departure leaves Mr Gilani’s Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) well below the 172 seats needed to preserve its majority.
On Monday, the premier is due to meet Shahbaz Sharif, president of Pakistan Muslim League (PML-N) – the biggest opposition party in the National Assembly.
The PML-N – which rules Punjab province with the support of Mr Gilani’s PPP – was a partner in the central government’s ruling alliance, but withdrew two years ago because of political differences.
Shahbaz Sharif has consulted his older brother and PML-N supremo, Nawaz Sharif, ahead of the meeting with the prime minister.
Discussing the political turmoil last week, Nawaz Sharif said he would not become a part of the “puppet show”.
The statement was interpreted as a suggestion that the smaller groups have deserted the PPP-led civilian government at the behest of the security establishment.
On Monday, Mr Gilani is also due to meet the leader of another major opposition party, the PML-Q.
As the National Assembly holds its first session of the new year later on Monday, the MQM is expected to cross the aisle to the opposition benches.
The party says it quit the alliance because fuel price hikes, bad governance and corruption had “passed all limits”.
Even so, he said that by not pulling out of government in Sindh province, the MQM had given the government “a chance to take corrective measures”.
The MQM dominates politics in the city of Karachi, the capital of the southern province of Sindh.
The MQM’s militant wing is widely believed to be behind a wave of ethnic and political killings in Karachi over the last few years.
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