Staff Reporter Quetta
Jam Kamal Khan on Sunday stepped down as the Balochistan chief minister, it was confirmed on Sunday evening.
“Jam Kamal Khan has submitted his resignation to the Governor of Balochistan Syed Zahoor Ahmad Agha,” a statement issued by the governor’s spokesperson, Paind Khan Kharoti, said.
The resignation was accepted by Governor Agha, it added. In a tweet earlier, Khan said he had given his “utmost time and energy” for Balochistan’s governance and development despite “many deliberate political hindrances”.
“I would rather leave respectfully and not be part of their monetary agenda and bad governance formulation,” he said, apparently referring to the disgruntled group comprising members of his own Balochistan Awami Party (BAP) and allies that had been demanding his resignation.
The chief minister’s resignation comes on the back of a months-long saga, whose early manifestations were witnessed in June this year, when opposition members had camped outside the provincial assembly’s building for days in protest against the government led by Alyani for its refusal to allocate development funds for their constituencies in the budget.
The protest had led to mayhem and police had later booked 17 opposition lawmakers in connection with the incident.
Following that, 16 members of the opposition had filed a no-trust motion against the chief minister.
However, the Governor House Secretariat had returned the motion to the Balochistan Assembly on technical grounds.
Earlier this month, a no-confidence motion, signed by 14 lawmakers, had been submitted to the secretariat of the Balochistan Assembly, as Alyani continued to face criticism from the disgruntled members of his party over what they termed his failure to consult them in running the affairs of the province.
The chief minister had also stepped down as the BAP president. However, he later withdrew his resignation.
On Friday, opposition members had claimed that three lady and one male MPAs had gone missing because they had signed the no-confidence motion against Jam Kamal.
The four MPAs had gone missing on the day when the angry group with the support of the opposition parties tabled the no-confidence motion in the Balochistan Assembly on Oct 20.
They later surfaced in Islamabad, claiming there had been no foul play.
The MPAs, Akbar Askani, Bushra Rind, Laila Tareen and Mahjabeen Sheran, returned to Quetta in the official plane of the Balochistan government.
With the return of four ‘missing’ MPAs and their announcement of support for angry lawmakers of the Balochistan Awami Party, success of the no-trust motion against Khan could not be ruled out as Nawab Sanaullah Zehri also joined hands with the disgruntled group.
Later, former Balochistan chief minister Nawab Sanaullah Zehri and Jamiat Ulema-i-Islam-F general secretary Maulana Abdul Ghafoor Haideri asked CM Jam Kamal to resign because he has lost his confidence now.
Speaking to the media flanked with Maulana Abdul Ghafoor at the residence of Speaker Abdul Quddus Bizenjo in Quetta, Sanaullah Zehri said that when a no-confidence motion was brought against him, he did not try to agree anyone.
“I had resigned myself before the no-confidence motion. Standing in the assembly, I said that came with respect and would leave with honour.”
He also advised Jam Kamal to resign as it is not his honour to cling to power. “In politics, yesterday’s friends are today’s enemies and today’s friends are tomorrow’s enemies. The obedience of Balochistan’s tradition is to prioritize personal status over position.”
Maulana Abdul Ghafoor Haideri said that Jam Kamal did not even take care of women for saving the government, adding that the obstacles have been created in the way of democracy.
“I have no personal difference with Jam Kamal but issue with his way of ruling. The government should run the affairs along with the opposition.”
Meanwhile, with the addition of four “missing” lawmakers of the provincial assembly, the group of the Balochistan Awami Party’s disgruntled members has secured the required number in the provincial assembly to oust the Jam Kamal Khan-led government in the province.