MULTAN: Cracks have appeared in the ranks of the Pakistan Tehrik-e-Insaf over setting up the South Punjab Secretariat in Bahawalpur.
The PTI office-bearers have started fixing banners at all busy Chowks, demanding the party leadership establish the South Punjab Secretariat in Multan and camp offices in Bahawalpur and Dera Ghazi Khan. A large number of office-bearers are unhappy with the PTI leadership over shifting of the secretariat from Multan to Bahawalpur. PTI former founder district president Ijaz Janjua said the workers were extremely unhappy with the decision. He said he could not face pressure from the workers as they were ceaselessly demanding the establishment of the secretariat in Multan. Ijaz Janjua said that Multan district was situated in the centre of DG Khan and Bahawalpur divisions.
PTI Multan city president Malik Adnan Dogar said that the South Punjab Secretariat should be established in Multan because of its central location. The historical and geographical importance of Multan was unique and Multan always performed tough tasks like the establishment of the country’s biggest quarantine centre in fight against COVID-19, he added.
Adnan Dogar said that Multan was a hub of industrial activities. He said that all modern facilities, including education, health and transportation, were available in Multan, therefore, the South Punjab Secretariat should be established there. He appealed to Prime Minister Imran Khan and Chief Minister Usman Buzdar to revisit their decision.
PTI MNA Malik Ahmed Hassan Dehr underlined the need for establishing the secretariat in Multan, otherwise, the PTI would have to face an irreparable loss in the Seraiki region. He said the PTI had constituted a committee to decide the place for South Punjab Secretariat and majority of its members belonged to Bahawalpur and RY Khan. No member from Multan or Dera Ghazi Khan was included. The MNA said that Multan was a suitable place for the secretariat as it was connected with four motorways interchanges while Bahawalpur was 60km from the motorway. Multan had an international airport, metro bus service, southern Punjab’s biggest grain and wood markets and south Punjab’s biggest industrial estate, but the committee had ignored all these things.