Bhutto-Zardari summons key party meeting as tensions deepen within Pakistan’s ruling coalition 

Bhutto-Zardari summons key party meeting as tensions deepen within Pakistan’s ruling coalition 
Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, former Foreign Minister of Pakistan and current head of the Pakistan People's Party, speaks during an interview with AFP at the Pakistani Embassy in Washington, DC on June 4, 2025. (AFP/ file)
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Updated 09 October 2025
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Bhutto-Zardari summons key party meeting as tensions deepen within Pakistan’s ruling coalition 

Bhutto-Zardari summons key party meeting as tensions deepen within Pakistan’s ruling coalition 
  • Dispute over flood aid and river water rights sparks rare public clash within ruling alliance
  • Analysts say coalition likely to hold as powerful military remains key stabilizing force

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s ruling coalition faced fresh strain on Wednesday after former foreign minister Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari summoned a high-level meeting of his party to decide its stance amid an escalating rift with Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s government at the center. 

The disagreement between the two main coalition partners — Bhutto-Zardari’s Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) and Sharif’s Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) — has widened over how to distribute federal relief funds to victims of recent floods that have killed more than 1,000 people across Pakistan this year.

The PPP wants cash aid routed through the federal Benazir Income Support Programme (BISP), a welfare scheme named after Bhutto-Zardari’s late mother and former premier Benazir Bhutto, while Punjab’s PML-N government insists on using its own provincial damage assessments.

Tensions intensified after Punjab Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz, the daughter of former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and the PM’s niece, defended her province’s right to control its water resources. The remarks angered the PPP-led government in Sindh province, which lies downstream along the Indus River, Pakistan’s main water source, and has long accused Punjab of hoarding water flows.

The escalating feud has raised questions about the durability of the coalition that has governed Pakistan since early 2024 under a post-election power-sharing arrangement.

“Chairman Bilawal Bhutto Zardari has summoned a meeting of the Pakistan People’s Party’s Central Executive Committee at Bilawal House Karachi. Important decisions regarding national politics will be made in the meeting,” the PPP said in a post on X, formerly Twitter.

President Asif Ali Zardari, Bhutto-Zardari’s father and co-chairman of the PPP, has also called Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi, seen as close to Pakistan’s military leadership, to Karachi to help defuse tensions.

On Wednesday evening, the president met Naqvi, Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar and National Assembly Speaker Ayaz Sadiq in Nawabshah in a meeting widely seen as part of efforts to defuse tensions within the ruling coalition.

PPP spokesperson Nadeem Afzal Chan told Arab News the party would discuss “the future of the alliance” at the upcoming meeting, scheduled for Oct. 18. 

“The party has made certain demands, including local government elections in Punjab, use of BISP data for flood relief, and support measures for farmers,” he said. “The party will continue to raise its voice in favor of these demands.”

Punjab Information Minister Azma Bukhari, a close aide to Maryam Nawaz, rejected the PPP’s accusations and dismissed calls for an apology from the Punjab chief minister.

“Giving dictation and interference in administrative affairs is not acceptable,” Bukhari told Arab News. 

“They are our allies. They can advise us, but it is the prerogative of the government and the chief minister to accept or reject that advice. They should not use this advice as a blackmailing tool. Their recommendations are welcome, but the government will see what it can do.”

She said BISP data “is different than flood loss data,” explaining that Punjab’s government was calculating losses of property, livestock and crops independently.

“Maryam Nawaz will never apologize, and why would she apologize? Should she apologize for standing with Punjab? It is out of the question,” Bukhari added, when asked if the CM would withdraw her comments on water resources. 

While opposition politicians have urged Bhutto-Zardari’s party to move a no-confidence motion against Prime Minister Sharif, most analysts say such an escalation remains improbable.

After the February 2024 general elections, no single party won a parliamentary majority. Candidates backed by jailed former premier Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) ran as independents and secured the largest bloc of seats, but were unable to form a government. The PML-N and PPP subsequently stitched together a coalition through complex National Assembly arithmetic, bringing in smaller parties to reach a majority.

This coalition is widely believed to have the backing of Pakistan’s powerful military establishment, which has long played a decisive role in shaping political outcomes and continues to be seen as a stabilizing force behind the current setup.

“The tensions will ultimately die down as the government has full backing of the [military] establishment. Maryam Nawaz is unlikely to apologize for her statements, but there could be some sort of clarification,” senior journalist Mazhar Abbas said. 

Veteran journalist Suhail Warraich also said the row would likely end in reconciliation.

“The end will be that the two parties will patch up, nothing more,” Warraich told Arab News. 

“This will happen without any apology from Maryam Nawaz. These issues create noise but rarely lead to breakups.”


Punjab agrees to partner with Global Green Growth Institute to develop carbon-credit projects

Punjab agrees to partner with Global Green Growth Institute to develop carbon-credit projects
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Punjab agrees to partner with Global Green Growth Institute to develop carbon-credit projects

Punjab agrees to partner with Global Green Growth Institute to develop carbon-credit projects
  • Province’s chief minister discusses partnership with the top GGGI official on the sidelines of COP30
  • Development comes as Punjab reels from its worst monsoon floods this year, a persistent smog crisis

ISLAMABAD: Punjab Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz Sharif agreed on Thursday to partner with the Global Green Growth Institute (GGGI) to develop carbon-credit projects and expand access to climate financing, during a meeting with the institute’s leadership on the sidelines of the COP30 summit in Brazil.

An independent intergovernmental organization, GGGI was launched in Rio de Janeiro during a United Nations conference on sustainable development in 2012 and works with developing countries to design climate-finance projects and operationalize carbon-market instruments.

The collaboration comes as Punjab faces intensifying climate stresses, including its worst monsoon floods this year and a prolonged smog crisis that has forced school closures in recent years and caused respiratory diseases.

“GGGI will help strengthen Pakistan’s capacity in global carbon markets and carbon financing and assist the country in gaining access to carbon markets worldwide,” the Punjab administration said in a statement circulated after the chief minister’s meeting with the organization’s director general, Sang-Hyup Kim.

It said that GGGI offered to convert the present administration’s climate-improvement initiatives into carbon credits to develop green-growth projects.

“GGGI will also support Punjab in establishing carbon-credit programs at the provincial level,” it added.

Global carbon markets allow countries and companies to trade carbon credits, which are like certificates earned by projects that cut or remove emissions.

The sellers are usually developing countries or organizations running activities like reforestation, clean energy or pollution-control projects. The buyers are countries or companies that still produce emissions and need a way to meet their climate targets.

They purchase these credits to balance out the pollution they cannot eliminate. The system works because the atmosphere is shared, with a ton of emissions reduced in Pakistan having the same effect on the climate as a ton reduced in Europe or the United States.

The statement said the chief minister told the GGGI official that Punjab plans to move forward on green-financing proposals tied to air-quality mitigation, water and sanitation, reforestation and e-mobility, saying these areas would form the backbone of the province’s climate-resilience strategy.

It added that the GGGI director general appreciated the Punjab administration’s commitment to environmental improvement, hoping that the partnership would help advance sustainable development goals.