Four ex-FATA senators to retire next year
Another four senators, however, will remain in office until 2024
PESHAWAR:
After the merger of the erstwhile Federally Administered Tribal Areas (Fata) with Khyber-Pakhtunkwa (K-P), four senators elected from these areas are set to complete their term in March.
Another four senators, however, will remain in office until 2024.
At the moment, the tribal areas - which were previously considered as federal areas, were exclusively represented in the upper house of Parliament through eight senators. They were elected by members of the national assembly.
Four senators, including Aurangzeb Khan, Haji Momin Afridi, Taj Afridi and Sajjad Hussain Turi, had been elected to the upper house of Parliament as independent candidates in 2015 for a six-year tenure. That tenure is due to expire early next year.
Salman Khan
ISLAMABAD: Over 65 per cent of the senators who are set to retire on March 11, 2021 after completing their six-year constitutional term belong to the opposition parties.
Giving the party position in the national and provincial assemblies that form the electoral college of the Senate, the opposition parties, which have been threatening to submit en masse resignations from the assemblies as part of their ongoing anti-government campaign, will not be able to retain their majority in the upper house of parliament, even if their members do not resign from the legislatures.
The term-wise data of the senators shows that out of the 52 members retiring from the present 103-member Senate in March next year, 34 belong to the opposition parties and 18 from the treasury benches. The total strength of the Senate is 104, but former finance minister of the PML-N Ishaq Dar has not taken oath as senator since he has been living in self-exile in London along with former prime minister Na
Salman Khan
ISLAMABAD: Over 65 per cent of the senators who are set to retire on March 11, 2021 after completing their six-year constitutional term belong to the opposition parties.
Giving the party position in the national and provincial assemblies that form the electoral college of the Senate, the opposition parties, which have been threatening to submit en masse resignations from the assemblies as part of their ongoing anti-government campaign, will not be able to retain their majority in the upper house of parliament, even if their members do not resign from the legislatures.
The term-wise data of the senators shows that out of the 52 members retiring from the present 103-member Senate in March next year, 34 belong to the opposition parties and 18 from the treasury benches. The total strength of the Senate is 104, but former finance minister of the PML-N Ishaq Dar has not taken oath as senator since he has been living in self-exile in London along with former prime minister Na