Protests and talks cannot go together: Pervez Rashid
07 December, 2014
ISLAMABAD: Information Minister Pervez Rashid said “Protests and talks cannot go together,” while addressing a meeting of the Federal Executive Council of a faction of the Pakistan Federal Union of Journalists on Saturday.
The minister asked the PTI leadership to take steps for making the “atmosphere conducive to resumption of dialogue”.
PTI leader Dr Arif Alvi, who remained a member of the party’s negotiating team, expressed surprise over the minister’s call, saying: “The atmosphere has been conducive to talks for past many months as there has been no violence or any unconstitutional act committed by the PTI
Arif Alvi said the PTI had been holding peaceful sit-ins and public meetings at various places in the country and the protests could not be called off at any cost. On the other hand, he alleged, the government had used force against PTI workers and put them behind bars. Yet, he said, PTI was “peacefully waiting” for the resumption of talks.
Finance Minister Ishaq Dar, who led the government’s negotiating team before talks with the PTI collapsed in September, has already said that dialogue could resume soon after Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif’s return to the country from the UK.
Despite public pronouncements of their willingness to resume talks, both sides have been accusing each other of putting hurdles in the way of dialogue.
Meanwhile, hitting out hard at the PTI chief for his alleged failure to present proof of rigging in a Lahore constituency before an election tribunal earlier in the day, the information minister said Mr Khan had been against exposed before the nation.
Mr Rashid was also critical of the media which, he said, gave `undue’ coverage to the PTI’s sit-in. “The PTI represents only nine per cent of the National Assembly, and not even parliament, since it has no representation in the Senate. But the PTI’s protest at D-Chowk was given huge coverage,” he said. He was of the opinion that TV broadcast of the protest sit-in had sent a wrong message to the international community and scared foreign investors.
The minister said the PTI’s protest had been ignored by lawyers, traders, students and other members of civil society. Similarly, he said, no political party was standing with the PTI, “which has no role in the struggle for the restoration of democracy and fundamental rights of the people of Pakistan”.
“Instead, at a time when political workers were facing jails and lashes for raising voice against the dictatorship, Imran Khan was entertaining the people by playing cricket,” he said.
|