PA Session adjourned till May 16

From Abid Usman

LAHORE: The much-anticipated session of the Punjab Assembly (PA) with a no-confidence motion — filed by PTI and PML-Q MPAs against Deputy Speaker Dost Muhammad Mazari — on the agenda was adjourned till 11:30am on May 16 (Monday) without tabling of the resolution.
PA Speaker Chaudhry Parvez Elahi, who was supposed to convene the session, called off the sitting at around 11am, half an hour before it was to supposed to begin.
“In exercise of the powers vested in me under rule 25(b) of the Rules of Procedure of the Provincial Assembly of Punjab, 1997, I, Parvez Elahi, Speaker, Provincial Assembly of Punjab, hereby order that the next sitting of the 40th Session of Punjab Assembly will now be held on Monday, 16th May 2022 at 11:30am in Assembly Chambers, Lahore, instead of Thursday, 28th April 2022 at 11:30am,” a notification issued by the speaker said.
Talking to media outside the PA, Elahi said that officials of the assembly were being “harassed” by police officers. “Some of them have been arrested while the police is raiding houses of others,” he said.
The speaker said that during the previous session, members of the treasury benches suffered major injuries because of PML-N lawmakers. “One of our MPA is in ICU and is battling for her life.” Elahi added that yesterday’s session was postponed due to “these unforeseen circumstances”.
The voting Thursday was to be held through a secret ballot amid strict security arrangements. No MPA had been allowed to bring his/her mobile phone in the House. Women lawmakers had been barred from carrying their handbags on the floor, besides guests had also not been allowed to witness Thursday’s session.
On the other hand, PML-N parliamentary and PTI dissident lawmakers earlier held a joint meeting to chalk out a strategy for Thursday’s PA session. Of the 197 votes Hamza polled to become the CM, 26 were from the PTI’s dissidents belonging to the Tareen, Aleem and Asad Khokhar groups.
“The PML-N, PPP and PTI’s dissident lawmakers have decided to support Mazari to foil the resolution against him,” a PML-N MPA told media.
Meanwhile, PTI has approached the Lahore High Court to stop these MPAs from casting votes in the no-confidence resolution against Mazari.
In a petition, it contended that under Article 63-A(1)(b)(i) of the Constitution, lawmakers who go against directions issued by a parliamentary party, in relation with the elections of PM or CM, can be declared to have defected from the party by its chief.
These 25 MPAs had voted for Hamza despite party orders and should therefore be deseated and disqualified, it stated.
Subsequently, the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) has sought responses of dissident MPAs over the matter on April 29.
Security at the assembly ahead of Thursday’s meeting was beefed up after the PA session on April 16 witnessed unprecedented violence allegedly leaving many injured, including Speaker Elahi and PTI MPA Asia Amjad. The House, however, ended up electing Hamza Shehbaz, leader of the opposition in the House and the son of Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, as the chief minister amid a boycott by PTI and PML-Q lawmakers.
Mazari, who was allegedly roped in on his side by Hamza ahead of the election, had initiated the assembly proceedings from a guest lobby in the hall over a megaphone and read out the agenda and rules for the election of the chief minister. Police and anti-riot forces had taken positions inside the House, while women MPAs sat over the speaker’s dais and chanted slogans.
Elahi had claimed that all the powers delegated to the deputy speaker were void as soon as the Punjab Assembly session ended on April 16.
PA Secretary Muhammad Khan Bhatti said the deputy speaker called the deputy commissioner and the operations deputy inspector general of police, who summoned a heavy contingent of law enforcers despite the fact that only the sergeants-at-arms had the powers to step on the floor of the House.
“Mazari conducted the election process from the Officers’ Box with a megaphone, which was contrary to the assembly rules and procedures,” he maintained.