KARACHI: The Sindh cabinet on Sunday bulged with 37 members
from its earlier size of 17 with induction of 20 new members — nine of
them ministers — whose names had been finalised by PPP chairman Bilawal
Bhutto-Zardari in a meeting with Chief Minister Syed Murad Ali Shah on
Saturday night.
The nine ministers were sworn in at Governor House, where Sindh Governor Dr Ishratul Ibad administered their oath.
Right now, there are 18 ministers, 15 special assistants and four advisers in the Sindh cabinet.
The chief minister, however, still did not give the portfolios of home and finance to the new members of the cabinet.
The
ministers who took oath on Sunday with their portfolios are: Manzoor
Wassan [industries], Mir Hazar Khan Bijarani [planning and development],
Imdad Pitafi [works and services], Fayaz But [public health and rural
development], Mohammed Ali Malkani [livestock and fisheries], Mumtaz
Jakhrani [population welfare], Nasir Shah [transport], Mohammad Bux
Maher [sports], and Jam Ikram Dharejo [cooperatives].
The
expansion in the cabinet reflects a mix of young and old
parliamentarians in the cabinet with Mr Bijarani, 70, being the oldest
and Mohammed Bux Maher, 28, the youngest among the ministers.
Five
of the ministers are new entrants with two of them — Fayaz But and Mr
Pitafi — had been part of the previous PPP government as advisers. The
old guards like Mr Bijarani and Mr Wassan had been ministers earlier
with the former had vast experience as parliamentarian in provincial and
federal legislatures and cabinets previously.
Mr
Malkani is too a senior parliamentarian who has history of switching
from one to another political parties in the past. Nasir Shah was
formerly mayor of Sukkur and a minister in Syed Qaim Ali Shah’s cabinet.
Mumtaz Jakhrani is a Sindh Assembly member from Jacobabad, Ikram
Dharejo is son-in-law of PPP stalwart Pir Mazharul Haq, while Mohammed
Bux Maher is son of Ghulam Mohammed Maher and at present chief of the
Maher clan.
The 11 special assistants included Rehana
Leghari and Nadir Khwaja who are given human rights and chief minister’s
inspection team portfolios. Ms Leghari is a PPP MPA while Mr Khwaja is
said to be an old party worker from Badin.
Burhan
Chandio [narcotics] is brother of Sardar Khan Chandio of Qambar while
Abid Bhayyo [youth affairs] is a brother of a PPP leader of Shikarupr
district.
Taimoor Talpur [inter-provincial coordination department] is a son of the party’s senior lawmaker, Jam Yusuf Talpur.
Similarly,
Syed Qasim Naveed [special initiatives] is a son of Syed Naveed Qamar,
PPP parliamentary leader in the National Assembly.
Former
interior minister Rehman Malik’s son Umer Malik, aged 27, is the
youngest among the special assistants and in the present cabinet. He is a
professional in actuarial sciences and is given public-private
partnership unit to assist the chief minister.
Baber
Effendi [irrigation] is a retired bureaucrat with expertise in
irrigation, Zulfikar Bihan [special education] is a party worker from
Naushero Feroze district. Shahid Thahim [Sindh education and vocational
training authority] is a son of former education minister Abdul Salam
Thahim, while Anthony Naveed [interfaith harmony] is a party worker from
Karachi.
Sources in the Pakistan Peoples Party,
however, said the rich portfolios given to the new entrants like Mr
Pitafi and Mr But could create anger among those senior parliamentarians
who were entrusted with low-key ministries.
Meanwhile,
Sindh Chief Minister Syed Murad Ali Shah said the expansion of Sindh
cabinet was aimed at developing a good team to start teamwork.
Speaking
to media after offering fateha at the Quaid’s mausoleum along with his
cabinet members, he said he had expanded the cabinet as he needed a good
team to serve people of Sindh to the best of his abilities and
expertise.
“My cabinet is a great combination of senior
parliamentarians and youngest members of assembly,” he said, adding,
this combination would work in the supreme interest of the people of the
province.
Replying to a question on Kalabagh Dam, Mr
Shah said the chairman of Wapda might have not read the report of A. N.
G. Abbasi on the water available in the system because of his busy
schedule.
“This is a dead issue but some people merely
to score points on political grounds keep this issue alive from time to
time,” he said and added people of three provinces, Sindh, Balochistan
and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa had already rejected the controversial project.
The
chief minister said his cabinet would be tasked for result-oriented
activities and they would be accountable for their performance.
“They
are public representatives, people of Sindh have elected them and this
is a baseless impression that some of the ministers are feudal lords.”
Later,
Mr Shah herded his cabinet members to Bilawal House to meet the PPP
chairman, Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari, where they discussed their future
plans. Mr Shah thanked the PPP chief for trusting him and his team.
Besides,
Mr Shah asked the divisional commissioners, particularly those of
Karachi, Hyderabad, and Mirpurkhas to take all-out efforts to drain out
rainwater from streets and low-lying areas.
“I will hold you responsible if you fail to perform,” he said.
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