LAHORE, Jan 3: A
25-member Punjab cabinet was sworn in at a ceremony held at the Governor's
House here on Friday evening. Four MPAs were appointed special assistants
and an equal number advisers to the chief minister , putting the strength
of the provincial cabinet at 33. The cabinet will have its first meeting
on Saturday morning.
Governor Khalid Maqbool administered the oath
to the ministers after Chief Secretary Hafeez Akhtar Randhawa read out the
letter of their appointment.
Chief Minister Chaudhry Pervaiz Elahi
sat beside the governor at the dais and acting president of PML-Q Chaudhry
Shujaat Hussain in the first row of the parliamentarians in the Darbar
Hall.
Most of the new ministers were not aware of their portfolios
till their oath. And many looked surprised and even shocked after checking
their departments from a list provided to reporters by the officials
concerned.
As against the expectations, no woman MPA was taken as
minister. The team of ministers included only one MPA of the PPP Patriots
Makhdoom Ashfaq Ahmad and the National Alliance's Hussain Jahania Gardezi.
One of them, Mian Aslam Iqbal, was elected as an independent candidate but
had later joined the PML-Q.
The important portfolios of law,
finance, local government and rural development, and information have not
been allotted to anyone.
The cabinet included two former ministers
Arshad Khan Lodhi and Chaudhry Mohammad Iqbal, and two former
parliamentary secretaries Imran Masood and Dr Shafiq Chaudhry.
The
ministers and their portfolios are: Arshad Khan Lodhi (Sahiwal)
Agriculture, Chaudhry Mohammad Iqbal (Gujranwala) Food, Akhtar Hussain
Rizvi (Sialkot) Labour and Human Resources, Mian Imran Masood (Gujrat)
Education, Chaudhry Zaheeruddin (Faisalabad) Communication and Works, Gul
Hameed Khan Rokri (Mianwali) Revenue, Relief and Consolidation.
Dr
Mohammad Shafique Chaudhry (Faisalabad) Prison, Manazir Ali Ranjha
(Sargodha) Colonies, Mohammad Sibtain Khan (Mianwali) Mines and Minerals,
Amir Sultan Cheema (Sargodha) Irrigation and Power, Rana Shamshad Ahmad
Khan (Gujranwala) Transport, Col Malik Mohammad Anwar Khan (retired)
(Attock) Co-operatives.
Khadim Hussain Wattoo (Bahawalnagar) Zakat
and Ushr, Dr Tahir Ali Javed (Narowal) Health, Mohammad Ajmal Cheema
(Sialkot) Industries, Syed Haroon Ahmad Sultan (Muzaffargarh) Livestock
and Dairy Development, Dr Ashfaqur Rehman (Toba Tek Singh) Forestry and
Fisheries, Mian Mohammad Aslam Iqbal (Lahore) Tourism, Naeemullah Shahani
(Bhakkar) Sports.
Hussain Jahania Gardezi (Khanewal) Literacy and
Non-formal Urban Education, Makhdoom Ashfaq Ahmad (Rahim Yar Khan)
Environment Protection, Syed Raza Gilani (Okara) Housing and Urban
Development, Jam Mohammad Hashim Ghalicha (Rajanpur) Population Welfare,
Sardar Hasnain Bahadur Dareshak (Bahawalpur) Excise and Taxation and
Chaudhry Shaukat Ali Bhatti (Hafizabad) Culture and Youth Affairs.
Raja Mohammad Basharat, Makhdoom Ali Akbar, Col Shuja Khanzada
(retired) and Dr Suhail Zafar Cheema were appointed special assistants,
and Jahangir Khan Tarin, Lt-Col Shujaat Ahmad Khan (retired), Maj Asghar
Hayat Kalyar (retired) and Naeem Raza advisers to the chief minister.
Talking to reporters, Chaudhry Pervaiz Elahi said the cabinet had
been selected on political considerations and while keeping in view
members' experience and expertise. Young people had also been included in
the cabinet, he said.
He said more ministers, including women,
would be taken in the cabinet in the second and third phases. He did not
disclose the final number of his cabinet ministers and advisers and said
its (cabinet) size would be 'reasonable'.
The chief minister said
the cabinet might look large because it belonged to a big province, having
more assembly members than the National Assembly. He said he had already
explained priorities of his government and people would see more
development in many fields in near future. A lot was being done to improve
law and order situation in the province.
The chief minister
expressed the hope that the cabinet would perform well. He denied any
differences with the provincial governor and said they had been working in
close liaison from the day one. Those spreading the news of the removal of
the governor were mischief mongers, he said.
Chaudhry Pervaiz
denied that the government was trying to influence the by-elections,
saying there was no need to indulge in such practices when his PML-Q was
set to win majority seats.
He told a questioner that he had not
promised reinstatement of the dismissed teachers and doctors. He had asked
them to file appeals against their dismissals, and they would be
reinstated after the fulfilment of all legal requirements.
Earlier, the governor, who looked happy, appreciated the selection
of the cabinet, saying it was composed of new and experienced
parliamentarians.
He termed the induction of the cabinet a good
omen for the nation. He said for the first time in the history of Pakistan
a military set-up had peacefully transferred power to the civilian
government. Both these parties were moving ahead in peace and agreement,
showing political maturity of the nation.
The governor hoped that
all sides of the system would work hand-in-hand.
The ceremony was
attended by a number of legislators, their relatives and friends, the
Punjab Assembly speaker and the deputy speaker, senior civil and military
officers, including the Rangers director-general.