Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif will undertake a day-long visit to Karachi today where he will chair a consultative meeting on the development projects.
The prime minister along with the leaders of allied parties will pay homage to Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah during a visit to the mausoleum of the father of the nation.
The prime minister will also visit the Sindh Chief Minister’s House and meet with Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah.
Earlier, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said that the coalition government inherited serious economic challenges including record inflation, unemployment, and poverty. He, however, vowed to make untiring efforts for providing much-awaited relief to the masses.
The prime minister, during an interaction with the newsmen in Islamabad, said Pakistan was faced with serious economic challenges.
He said even the relief measures announced by him in his maiden address as the prime minister, including Rs25,000 minimum wage and a 10 per cent increase in pay and pension were also meagre compared to over 20 per cent inflation rate.
He told the media that earlier in the day, he had interacted with the economic experts seeking their suggestions to overcome the economic difficulties.
The prime minister said the statistics being shared by the government were not meant to upset the people but to explain the economic challenges inherited by the government.
The prime minister said after the formation of the federal cabinet, the government would come up with short-term and mid-term plans to overcome the inflation and the revival of the economic system.
To a question, the prime minister hoped that being the coalition partner, the Pakistan People’s Party would join the federal cabinet.
He said the surge by 2300 points in the 100-index of Pakistan stock exchange and rupee appreciation of Rs10 against the dollar was the feel-good factors. “The stock exchange was in fact a barometer to gauge the sentiments of the business community in the country, he added. However, this needed to be built up through dedicated and untiring efforts,” he said.
The prime minister said the main focus of the coalition government was to introduce the electoral reforms. He said though it was one and half years to complete the government’s term, it was the coalition parties to decide when to go for elections.
To a question, he said the evil nexus between ex-prime minister Imran Khan and the National Accountability Bureau (NAB) had been exposed as it believed in the political victimisation.
Shehbaz Sharif assured that the incumbent government neither believed in nor intended to carry out any victimization; however, the law would take its own course to punish the wrongdoers as the institutions were well cognizant of their responsibilities.
Asked about the relief measures he had announced soon after his election, the prime minister explained that the benchmark of the minimum wage had been elevated to Rs 25,000 a month and pensions increased by 10 per cent, also asking the business community to announce 10 per cent raise for their employees with Rs100,000 monthly income.
The prime minister said by deploying the officials from all federating units, the PM House would be made to reflect as Pakistan House. However, merit will be the order of the day with one to be allowed to go against the merit.
Referring to the Letter-gate, the prime minister asked if Kashmir and Afghanistan could be discussed in the parliament then why not the letter.
To a question about the reversal to six-day a week working in the federal government organizations, the prime minister said five-day working suited only the prosperous nations while in Pakistan, it required immense hard work to overcome the issues.