Gilgit-Baltistan Dharna: Awami Action Committee and govt team meeting today
Apr 25, 2014 PAMIR TIMES
Islamabad, April 24: A three-member delegation of the Awami Action Committee has reached Islamabad today to hold dialogue with the five-member committee formed under the leadership of Federal Minister Chaudhary Barjees Tahir.
The dialogue will focus on resolution of the strike that has paralyzed life in the Gilgit-Baltistan for the last 11 days.
The Awami Action Committee has mobilized around a hundred thousand people in the Gilgit-Baltistan region and currently two huge, and yet very peaceful, strikes are going on in Skardu and Gilgit, at the Yadgar-e-Shuhada and the historical Garhi Bagh. A couple of days back thousands of people from Diamer, Hunza-Nagar, Ghizar and Astore had marched into Gilgit to join the main strike camp. The camp in Skardu is also being attended by tens of thousands of people for the last 11 days. The Awami Action Committee is an alliance of almost two dozen religious and progressive organizations, including federal political parties.
The government committee, which has former Advisor Attaullah Shahab, GB Council member Amjad Hussain Advocate, Muhammad Ibrahim and Minister Bashir Khan, was formed on Wednesday to make recommendations for resolving the longest strike of the region’s history. People had cast doubts on the authorities of the committee to take decisions, but Attaullah Shahab yesterday told the media that the prime minister has given full authority to the committee.
The government committee held a meeting on Thursday to discuss the issues. The meeting was also attended by GB Chief Minister Syed Mehdi Shah and Federal Minister Chaudhary Barjees Tahir.
Barjees Tahir later addressed a press conference in which he said that compared to Punjab the people of Pakistan are getting cheaper wheat. He said that the subsidy has not been withdrawn. “73% of the subsidy still remains”, he said. The Federal Minister also said that the government plans to invest billions of rupees in the Gilgit-Baltistan region, which will usher into a new era of economic prosperity and development.
It is pertinent to note that the subsidy had been provided by Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto in the early 70s on 19 items, including PIA fares and petroleum products. However, the subsidies have gradually been withdrawn and at the moment the people of Gilgit-Baltistan were getting subsidy on wheat only which is also gradually being withdrawn. There are reports that the government planned to increase the price of wheat to 26 rupees per kilogram in three years, according to an agreement signed in June 2011.
The Awami Action Committee emerged in reaction to the gradual increase of the wheat price between 2011 and 2014, when the price of wheat reached 16 rupees per kilogramme from 8 rupees. This hundred percent increase in the wheat price angered the people and they gathered on the platform of the Awami Action Committee, which developed a 9-point charter of demands and started a rigorous mobilization campaign throughout the region. Sensing the public pressure, the government decreased the price per kilogram of wheat to 14, reducing two rupees per kg. However, this did not resonate well with the Awami Action Committee and the movement started which is now at its peak.
In this background, the two committees will meet Friday to discuss the issues on the charter of demands and reach an agreement to end the situation in a peaceful manner.
Meanwhile, the Awami Action Committee has said that if their Charter of Demands is not accepted, they will announce the “fifth stage” of the movement after Friday prayers today. They have not clearly defined what the so-called “fifth stage” might be.
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Day nine: AAC’s protest over wheat prices sees renewed vigour
By
Shabbir Mir
Published: April 24, 2014
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Convoys from Skardu and Astore valleys reached the protest camp, injecting new life into the movement. PHOTO: FILE
GILGIT:
Agitation across Gilgit-Baltistan (G-B) over the wheat subsidy gained momentum as delegations from other parts of the region reached Gilgit on Wednesday.
Convoys from Skardu and Astore valleys reached the protest camp at Ghari Bagh by Tuesday night, injecting new life into the movement which entered its ninth day on Wednesday. They stayed in the camp overnight while residents extended hospitality by providing them food and water.
Well-fed and rested, the speakers kept a crowd of nearly 20,000 engaged. They criticised the government, bureaucracy and ministers for being unable to resolve their issues and even demanded resignations from ministers, saying they have failed the public time and again over the past four years.
“Listen to us our so-called rulers!” shouted one of the leaders of Awami Action Committee (AAC) from the crowd. Amid loud jeers, he added: “We are not going to withdraw at any cost. Subsidy is our right and we will get it by hook or by crook.”
“This crowd is a referendum against [Chief Minister] Mehdi Shah’s government,” maintained Sultan Raees, another leader of AAC, adding Shah should either accept their demands or step down.
Meanwhile, shops and markets in the city were forcibly closed down by a group of people claiming to be representatives of AAC, an alliance of around 23 religious and political groups formed earlier this year to fight for lower wheat prices.
A show of unity
In an unprecedented show of unity and harmony, Sunnis and Shias prayed Maghrib (evening prayers) alongside each other at Ghari Bagh on Tuesday.
“Let us pray this unity stays and we succeed in achieving our goals,” said Maulana Khalil Qasmi as he led the prayers for which the AAC members and protesters had taken a break from their demonstration.
Published in The Express Tribune, April 24th, 2014.
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Agitation over wheat prices: Protesters pour into Gilgit as AAC ultimatum ends – The Express Tribune