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Imran Khan government

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Government of Pakistan (2018–2022)
Federal Cabinet of Imran Khan

48thCabinet of Pakistan
20182022
Date formed20 August 2018
Date dissolved10 April 2022
People and organisations
Head of stateMamnoon Hussain(until 9 September 2018)
Arif Alvi(from September 2018)
Head of governmentImran Khan
Member party PTI
Coalition partners:
MQM-P(Former)
BAP(Former)
GDA
AML(Former)
PML (Q)
IndependentJWP
Status in legislatureSenators
Coalition government
49 / 100 (49%)
National Assembly
Majoritycoalition
178 / 342 (52%)
Opposition partyPakistan Muslim League (N)
Opposition leaderShehbaz Sharif
History
Election2018
Legislature terms15thParliament of Pakistan
PredecessorMulk caretaker ministry
SuccessorFirst Shehbaz Sharif ministry
This article is part of
a series about
Imran Khan







Imran Khan's signature

TheImran Khan government was thefederal cabinet of Pakistan from 20 August 2018 to 10 April 2022. It was formed byImran Khan followinggeneral elections on 25 July 2018, which saw thePakistan Tehreek-e-Insaaf come to power. The cabinet had 34 federal ministers, 7 ministers of state, 10 Advisers to the Prime Minister and 35 Special Assistants to the Prime Minister (SAPM), most of whom assumed office on 20 August 2018.[1][2][3] The government was dissolved on 3 April 2022 following the dissolution of theNational Assembly of Pakistan by the President,Arif Alvi at the behest of the Prime Minister,Imran Khan.[4] On 7 April 2022, the Supreme Court of Pakistan ordered the restoration of the Federal Cabinet and National Assembly.[5] On 10 April 2022 the government was defeated in aVote of No-confidence (VONC) against Imran Khan, leading to its subsequent dissolution.[6]

Various ministers and advisors of the cabinet had previously served in the military government ofPervez Musharraf,[7][8][9] Out of a total of 21 ministers in 2018; 12 ministers had previously served under Musharraf, while 5 ministers served previously underPPP governments.[10] The PTI ministry saw 4 differentfinance ministers (Asad Umar,Abdul Hafeez Shaikh,Hammad Azhar,Shaukat Tarin) from 2018 to 2022. By April 2021 the government had reshuffled six times.[11] During its tenure, due to theCOVID-19 pandemic, economic pressures, theArmy increased its influence in civilian governance, with military officials being appointed to various posts.[12][13][14][15] The Imran Khan government was described as a civil-military "Hybrid Regime".[16][17][18] Then Prime MinisterImran Khan described himself and the army as being on the "same page".[19][20][21] Tensions between the Prime Minister and GenQamar Bajwa eventually leading to a rift.[22][23] Policy initiatives of the government include theEhsaas Programme,Kamyab Jawan Program,Plant for Pakistan,Raast, military extensions (Army,Navy,Airforce),Roshan Digital Account and theSehat Sahulat Program.

Cabinet

[edit]
Imran Khan's cabinet withMike Pompeo.

Khan announced his cabinet soon after taking the oath, he kept the ministry ofinterior to himself. His choice for ministries was criticized as he came into power on the slogan ofChange andNaya Pakistan but most of his appointees were previously ministers during the era ofPervez Musharraf and some served inPPP government which followed Musharraf era.[24][25][26][27][28][29]

He was criticized by supporters and critics for settling for "Diet Reform" as Musharraf pursued rather than the real change that was embodied by the PTI.[30]

To counter that, Imran Khan held meeting with the federal cabinet twice a week and monitor the ministers’ performances regularly.[31]

As a result,Khusro Bakhtiar was shuffled 5 times although he had served as a minister during Musharraf's regime and PML-N coalition government[32]

Shafqat Mehmood was assigned two portfolios and he was commended for his performance during COVID. He had also served as a minister during 1990s and Musharraf regime.[33]

Farogh Naseem has been part of Musharraf's legal team representing him against treason charges which aroused speculation on PTI's stance on if Pervez Musharraf will be tried for treason.[34]Tariq Bashir Cheema has been minister in a past PPP government.[35]

Fehmida Mirza has beenSpeaker of the National Assembly of Pakistan in a PPP government.[36]

Sheikh Rasheed Ahmad was assigned the railways and interior ministry on the basis of his experience as a minister during the Musharraf andPML-N era.[37]

Ghulam Sarwar Khan also served as a minister during Musharraf regime.[38]Zubaida Jalal Khan was a minister and held the same portfolio during Musharraf era.[39]

Fawad Chaudhry was media coordinator in the political party formed by Musharraf as well a special Assistant to Prime MinisterYousuf Raza Gilani.[40]

Shah Mehmood Qureshi held the same portfolio in a PPP government.[41]Babar Awan also served in a past PPP government.[42]

Malik Amin Aslam held same portfolio under Musharraf government but is more of a technocrat than a politician.[43]Abdul Razak Dawood was commerce minister for Musharraf as well.[44]

Omar Ayub Khan was the minister of state for finance inShaukat Aziz's cabinet during thePervez Musharraf regime.[45]Ali Muhammad Mahar was the formerChief Minister of Sindh during the Musharraf regime.[46]

Reshuffles

[edit]

Imran Khan reshuffled his cabinet for six times during his ministry. One of the cabinet reshuffles was on the directions of theIslamabad High Court that barred un-elected advisers and special assistants from heading the Cabinet committees.[47]

On 18 April 2019, the cabinet saw a reshuffle after Asad Umar stepped down as the finance minister.[48]

On 6 April 2020, the cabinet saw another reshuffle.[49] In late April 2020, PTI Senator Shibli Faraz was appointed as the information minister. Meanwhile, retired Lt Gen Asim Saleem Bajwa was appointed as special assistant to the prime minister for information replacing Firdous Ashiq Awan.[50]

In December 2020, the federal cabinet saw the fourth reshuffle days after theIslamabad High Court ruled that unelected advisers and special assistants could not head government’s committees.[51]

In April 2021,Shaukat Tarin was appointed as finance minister, the fourth person to hold the post in the last two years, as Prime Minister Imran Khan made his sixth cabinet reshuffle since assuming power.[52]

Federal Ministers

[edit]
Federal ministers[53]
#NamePortfolioAssumed officeLeft officeParty
1Imran KhanPrime Minister

All important policy issues and all other portfolios not allocated to any minister.

18 August 201810 April 2022PTI
2Shah Mehmood QureshiForeign Affairs20 August 201810 April 2022PTI
3Pervez KhattakDefence20 August 201810 April 2022PTI
4Fawad ChaudhryInformation & Broadcasting20 August 201818 April 2019PTI
Science and Technology18 April 201917 April 2021
Information and Broadcasting17 April 202110 April 2022
Law and Justice1 April 202210 April 2022
5Asad UmarFinance, Revenue and Economic Affairs20 August 201818 April 2019PTI
Planning, Development, Reforms and Special Initiatives19 November 201910 April 2022
6Shaukat TarinFinance and Revenue17 April 202116 October 2021PTI
Finance and Revenue27 December 202110 April 2022
7Hammad AzharEconomic Affairs8 July 20196 April 2020PTI
Industries & Production7 April 202017 April 2021
Finance and Revenue29 March 202117 April 2021
Energy17 April 202110 April 2022
Revenue Division11 September 20187 July 2019
8Sheikh Rasheed AhmadRailways20-08-201811-12-2020AML(P)
Interior11 December 202010 April 2022
9Khusro BakhtiarPlanning, Development and Reform20 August 201818 November 2019PTI
Statistics11 December 20184 April 2019
National Food Security & Research19 November 20196 April 2020
Economic Affairs7 April 202017 April 2021
Industries & Production17 April 202110 April 2022
10Shafqat MahmoodFederal Education and Professional Training20 August 201810 April 2022PTI
National History, and Literary Heritage Division20 August 201810 April 2022
11Ijaz Ahmed ShahParliamentary Affairs2 April 201917 April 2019PTI
Interior18 April 201911 December 2020
Narcotics Control11 December 202010 April 2022
12Syed Fakhar ImamNational Food Security and Research6 April 202010 April 2022PTI
13Omar AyubPower Division11 September 201810 April 2022PTI
Petroleum Division6 May 201917 April 2021
Economic Affairs17 April 202110 April 2022
14Ghulam Sarwar KhanPetroleum Division20 August 201817 April 2019PTI

Aviation

18 April 201910 April 2022
15Ali Haider ZaidiMaritime Affairs11 September 201810 April 2022PTI
16Murad SaeedState & Frontier Regions (State Minister)11 September 201817 September 2018PTI
Communications (State Minister)18 September 201816 December 2018
Postal Services (State Minister)26 October 201816 December 2018
Communications17 December 201810 April 2022
Postal Services17 December 20183 February 2020
17Azam SwatiScience & Technology5 October 20186 December 2018PTI
Parliamentary Affairs19 April 20197 April 2020
Narcotics Control7 April 202011 December 2020
Railways11 December 202010 April 2022
18Farogh NaseemLaw and Justice20 August 201826 November 2019MQM-P
Law and Justice29 November 20191 June 2020
Law and Justice24 July 20201 April 2022
19Syed Aminul HaqueInformation Technology and Telecommunication6 April 202031 March 2022MQM-P
20Tariq Bashir CheemaStates and Frontier Regions20 August 20185 September 2018PML(Q)
Housing and Works6 September 20181 April 2022
21Zubaida JalalDefence Production20 August 201810 April 2022BAP
22Noor-ul-Haq QadriReligious Affairs and Inter-faith Harmony20 August 201810 April 2022PTI
23Shireen MazariHuman Rights20 August 201810 April 2022PTI
24Fahmida MirzaCoordination20 August 201810 April 2022GDA
25Ali Amin GandapurKashmir Affairs and Gilgit Baltistan5 October 201810 April 2022PTI
26Moonis ElahiWater Resources18 July 202110 April 2022PML(Q)
27Muhammad Mian SoomroPrivatisation5 October 201810 April 2022PTI
Aviation Division12 December 201817 April 2019
28Shibli FarazInformation and Broadcasting28 April 202011 March 2021PTI
Science and Technology17 April 202110 April 2022
29Sahabzada Mehboob SultanNational Food Security & Research5 October 201818 November 2019PTI
States and Frontier Regions19 November 201910 April 2022
30Faisal VawdaWater Resources5 October 20183 March 2021PTI
31Abdul Hafeez ShaikhFinance, Revenue and Economic Affairs (As Adviser)19 April 201911 December 2020PTI
Finance and Revenue11 December 202029 March 2021
32Khalid Maqbool SiddiquiInformation Technology and Telecommunication20 August 20187 April 2020MQM-P
33Ali Mohammad MaharNarcotics Control4 October 201821 May 2019PTI

Minister of State

[edit]
#NamePortfolioAssumed officeLeft officeParty
1Shabbir Ali QureshiHousing and Works11 September 201810 April 2022PTI
2Ali Muhammad KhanParliamentary Affairs17 September 201810 April 2022PTI
3Zartaj GulClimate Change5 October 201810 April 2022PTI
4Farrukh HabibInformation and Broadcasting29 April 202110 April 2022PTI
5Shehryar AfridiInterior31 August 201817 April 2019PTI
State and Frontier Regions18 April 201925 September 2020
Narcotics Control10 June 201925 September 2020

Advisors

[edit]
Advisors to the Prime Minister
NamePartyPortfolioStatusAssumed officeLeft office
1Ishrat HussainPTIInstitutional Reforms andAusterityFederal Minister20 August 201810 April 2022
2Musaddiq AbbasiPTIInterior andAccountabilityFederal Minister26 January 202210 April 2022
3Abdul Razak DawoodPTICommerce, Textile, Industry & Production and InvestmenFederal Minister20 August 20186 April 2020
Commerceand InvestmentFederal Minister7 April 202010 April 2022
4Babar AwanPTIParliamentary AffairsFederal Minister6 April 202010 April 2022
5Ayub AfridiPTIOverseas Pakistanis & Human Resource DevelopmentFederal Minister23 November 202110 April 2022
6Malik Amin AslamPTIClimate ChangeFederal Minister20 August 201822 July 2020
7Zaheer-ur-din Babar AwanPTIParliamentary AffairsFederal Minister20 August 20183 September 2018
Parliamentary AffairsFederal Minister7 April 202010 April 2022
8Mirza Shahzad AkbarPTIAccountability & InteriorFederal Minister22 July 202024 January 2022
9Shaukat Fayaz Ahned TarinPTIFinance and RevenueFederal Minister17 October 202126 December 2021

Special Assistants to the Prime Minister

[edit]
#NamePartyPortfolioStatusAssumed officeLeft office
1Malik Amin AslamPTIClimate ChangeFederal Minister20 August 201810 April 2022
2Faisal SultanPTINational Health Services, Regulation and CoordinationFederal Minister3 August 202010 April 2022
3Sania NishtarPTIMinistry of Poverty Alleviation and Social SafetyFederal Minister10 June 201910 April 2022
4Shehzad ArbabPTIEstablishment DivisionFederal Minister11 April 202010 April 2022
5Moeed YusufPTINational Security AdviserFederal Minister24 December 201910 April 2022
6Ayub AfridiPTIOverseas Pakistanis & Human Resource DevelopmentMinister of State29 November 202110 April 2022
7Malik Aamir DogarPTIPolitical AffairsMinister of State15 November 202010 April 2022
8Waqar Masood KhanPTIFinance and RevenueMinister of State6 October 202024 August 2021
9Ali Nawaz AwanPTICapital Development Authority AffairsMinister of State6 November 201810 April 2022
10Usman DarPTIYouth AffairsHonorary3 Dec 201810 April 2022
11Jamshed Iqbal CheemaPTIFood SecurityHonorary19 April 202110 April 2022
12Raoof HasanPTIInformation and BroadcastingHonorary24 October 202010 April 2022
13Tabish GoharPTIEnergyHonorary30 March 202121 September 2021
14Yar Muhammad RindPTIWater Resources, Power and Petroleum in BalochistanHonorary20 March 201910 April 2022
15Shahbaz GillPTIPolitical CommunicationHonorary13 May 202010 April 2022
16Khalid MansoorPTICPEC affairsHonorary3 August 202110 April 2022
17Shahzad NawazPTICulture, Arts and Related CommunicationsHonorary16 November 202110 April 2022
18Arbab Ghulam RahimPTISindh AffairsHonorary28 July 202110 April 2022
19Makhdoom Syed Tariq Mahmood-Ul-HassanPTIOverseas Pakistanis and Human Development20 January 2022[54]10 April 2022
20Shahzain BugtiJWPReconciliation and Harmony in BalochistanHonorary7 July 202129 March 2022

Tenure

[edit]
Further information:First 100 days of Imran Khan's premiership andPremiership of Imran Khan

Domestic policy

[edit]

The Imran Khan government’s cabinet ministerShafqat Mahmood made a committee to counsel on forthcoming community consumption of "heritage buildings" which include governor houses around the country among others.[55]

The government’s finance ministerAsad Umar said that Khan had ordered him to bring back the laundered money from oversees. He said that government will sell bonds to expatriate Pakistanis.[56] As part of anti-corruption measures, his cabinet decided to putNawaz Sharif andMaryam Nawaz on exit control list so they cannot leave the country.[55] The cabinet also issued a directive to bring backIshaq Dar and sons of former prime minister Nawaz Sharif - Hussain and Hassan - to face justice in pending cases against them. The government also decided to implement the austerity measures announced in Khan's inaugural speech. It was also decided to auction the bulletproof and extravagant vehicles belonging to the prime minister house. The decision was made to avoid unnecessary international tours by government officials including the prime minister.[57] On 21 August 2018, the announcement made by the cabinet regarding putting Nawaz Sharif and Maryam Nawaz on exit control list was acted upon.[58]

Economic policy

[edit]

The government entered power in a twinbalance of payments and debt crisis with a large current account deficit and fiscal deficit in 2018, Khan's government sought a bailout from the IMF.[59] In exchange for the bailout, Khan's government slashed subsidy spending in the energy sector and unveiled an austerity budget to curb the fiscal deficit and limit government borrowing.[60] The IMF also demanded that the Pakistani government depreciate the rupee and improve tax collection. Khan's government decided to raise import tariffs to collect higher tax revenues and devalued the currency, this alongside the heavy import duty helped to curtail the current account deficit (import substitution).[citation needed]

Pakistan's overall balance of payment's position improved significantly following record-high remittances in 2020, which stabilised the central bank's foreign exchange reserves.[61] The fiscal deficit narrowed to less than 1% of GDP by 2020 due to the government's austerity policies,[62] and the rate of debt accumulation had significantly slowed. At the same time, Pakistan's debt remained high due to the high borrowing of previous governments in which the current government had to allocate $24 billion to pay off loans taken during the tenure of previous governments.[63][64][65]

Environmental policy

[edit]

On 24 August 2018, the government decided to commence a major tree plantation project. A task force was created to launch a cleanliness drive in the country. Climate change adviserMalik Amin Aslam informed about the first phase launch of 10-billion tree tsunami drive, and announced that 1.5 million saplings will be planted on 2 September 2018 for which 190 plant collection stations will be set up around the country from where the public will be able to collect saplings for plantation.[66]

Social policy

[edit]

In social policy, Khan's government has taken steps to restore religious sites belonging to religious minorities;[67] this included theKartarpur Corridor.[68] Khan's government took a significantly different position on the policy of minorities than the main opposition party, thePML-N, who had opposed the building of the corridor for Indian pilgrims.[69] Khan's government also instituted reforms toeducation andhealthcare on a national and regional level, respectively.[70][71][72]

Khan's government introduced reforms to Pakistan'ssocial safety net and the system of welfare in Pakistan more broadly.[73][74][75] This included broadening welfare payments which was initially for widows only, to include the disabled as well as provide health insurance coverage.[76]

Foreign policy

[edit]

Shah Mehmood Qureshi was sworn in as theForeign Minister, along with the rest of Khan's government cabinet, on 20 August. Qureshi held his first press conference as foreign minister, during which he said the new government's foreign policy would put "Pakistan first" and "begin and end at Pakistan", emphasizing a focus on national interests.[77] He said all policies would be made at the Foreign Office, and expressed willingness to consult previous foreign ministers, retired diplomats as well as important institutions whilst devising the foreign policy. He briefly touched upon Pakistan's relations with its neighbourhood, the United States and China, and outlined the government's visions and road map in the months to come.[77]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"FEDERAL MINISTERS / MINISTERS OF STATE AND ADVISERS / SPECIAL ASSISTANTS TO THE PRIME MINISTER UNDER THE PREMIERSHIP OF MR. IMRAN KHAN, FROM 18-08-2018 to date 10-04-2022"(PDF).Cabinet Secretariat (Pakistan).
  2. ^"16 ministers from PM Khan's cabinet sworn in".Dawn. 20 August 2018.
  3. ^"PM Imran's cabinet expands to 34".The Express Tribune. 2018-10-05. Retrieved2018-10-05.
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  5. ^"Doctrine of necessity buried: Supreme Court restores National Assembly, orders voting on no-confidence motion".www.thenews.com.pk.
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  56. ^"PM Imran has ordered to bring back laundered money: Umar".geo.tv. Retrieved20 August 2018.
  57. ^"Govt puts names of Sharif, daughter on ECL". tribune.com.pk. 20 August 2018. Retrieved21 August 2018.
  58. ^"First 100 days: PM terms Sidhu 'ambassador of peace'". tribune.com.pk. 2015-05-03. Retrieved2018-08-21.
  59. ^Findlay, Stephanie (4 July 2019)."IMF approves $6bn Pakistan bailout package after austerity budget".Financial Times. Archived fromthe original on 10 December 2022.
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  68. ^Siddiqui, Naveed (9 November 2019)."'This is the beginning': PM Imran inaugurates Kartarpur Corridor on a historic day".Dawn.
  69. ^"PML-N opposes, PPP supports Kartarpur Corridor initiative in NA".dawn.com. 12 November 2019.
  70. ^Raza, Syed Irfan (20 March 2020)."First phase of single national curriculum completed, says govt".dawn.com. Retrieved24 October 2020.
  71. ^"Sehat Insaf cards distributed among 7.2m families: CM".Thenews.com.pk. Retrieved24 October 2020.
  72. ^"PM Khan launches Sehat Sahulat Programme in KP". 20 August 2020. Retrieved24 October 2020.
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  74. ^"PM visits Ehsaas Kafalat payment site initiate payment to 7 m beneficiaries".Pakistan Today.
  75. ^"PM Imran Khan kicks off phase I of Ehsaas Kafaalat payments".Geo.tv. Retrieved3 January 2021.
  76. ^"KP govt launches Sehat Sahulat programme for all residents of province".dawn.com. 20 August 2020. Retrieved3 January 2021.
  77. ^ab"Pakistan's foreign policy will be made at Foreign Office, says Qureshi - The Express Tribune".tribune.com.pk. 20 August 2018. Retrieved8 September 2018.
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