ISLAMABAD: Minister for Information Attaullah Tarar has said the government will resume talks today, Wednesday, with the Jamaat-e-Islami (JI) religious political party, whose followers have been camped near the Pakistani capital for nearly two weeks against new taxes and inflation, particularly skyrocketing power bills.
Around 3,000 supporters of the JI, demanding that the government withdraw taxes on electricity to offset price hikes, have occupied a road in the garrison city of Rawalpindi since July 26, after being prevented by police from heading to the capital, Islamabad.
Several rounds of talks have been held between a government negotiating team and protest leaders but there has been no breakthrough so far.
“The government team had a productive discussion with the JI which would bring positive outcomes,” Tarar told media on Tuesday night, saying talks would resume on Wednesday.
The JI negotiating team is led by Liaquat Baloch, the party’s Naib Amir, while the government team comprises Minister for Interior Mohsin Naqvi, Minister for Information Tarar, Minister for Kashmir Affairs and States and Frontier Regions Amir Muqam, Minister for Energy Awais Leghari, the Prime Minister’s Media Coordinator Badar Shahbaz and Senior Leader of the ruling Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) Dr. Tariq Fazal Chaudhry.
The government raised power prices 26 percent during the last fiscal year, which ended June 30, before tacking on another 20 percent increase on July 13. Officials say the increases were needed to meet conditions set by the International Monetary Fund for a $7 billion loan deal reached last month.
The government has also added a confusing bevy of taxes on top of the base price, adding up to a bill that has more than doubled for some Pakistanis.
On Wednesday, the JI announced a series of protests starting with a march toward Islamabad tomorrow, Thursday, from Rawalpindi’s Liaquat Bagh. A sit-in is planned for Lahore on August 11 and another in Peshawar on August 12, followed by a nationwide shutdown call after August 14, which is the country’s Independence Day.