Thursday, April 23, 2020

Chairman PPP Bilawal Bhutto Zardari appeals to Muslims across the world and in Pakistan to “Stay at home and pray at home“

Chairman Pakistan Peoples Party Bilawal Bhutto Zardari has appealed to the people of Pakistan to stay at home and spend the month of Ramazan praying five times at home and protect themselves.
Chairman Bilawal talking to BBC World News said that Prime Minister Imran Khan’s logic and reasoning to change the restrictions which were already in place is beyond comprehension. He said that for the first few weeks, the lockdown went relatively well and the people were abiding by the restrictions. Only five members of mosque staff were allowed to offer prayers and people were urged to pray at home. The PM eased some restrictions including barber shops and tailors in the country so it was difficult to convince the religious minded people to follow the same restrictions about prayers. Before PM’s easing of restrictions, the religious people were cooperating and there was no need to ease those restrictions. However, now the PM is justifying his decision risking the lives of the people.


Chairman PPP said that Sindh was the first province to impose the lockdown and Sindh government had engaged the religious community because we do not have the capacity or police to stop congregational prayers in the mosques because mixed messages are coming from the federal government. We are still trying to engage the religious community but it is now difficult when the PM is making an issue about freedom. “I think this is a colossal failure of leadership”, he said. When we compare ourselves to the rest of the Muslim world like Saudi Arabia, Iran and others, they are taking steps to save the lives of their citizens. This is not the time for populous electoral decisions. It is time to take decisions on the advice of doctors and health experts. Doctors of Pakistan from Lahore to Karachi are protesting or holding press conferences appealing to take those necessary steps to protect them and ease the burden on our healthcare system.


He said that there are capacity issues and no province is being supported up to their expectations by the federal government in increasing their testing capacity. Sindh is testing the most per capita. We want the federal government to support all provinces of Pakistan in increasing their testing capacity. No country in the world is designed or capable to maintain such a lockdown but everywhere the governments and leaders prioritise the lives and health of their citizens. We in Sindh work with a philosophy that we can bring the economy back to life, but not the people. He said that the economic indicators were already bad for Pakistan before Covid-19 pandemic because it was mismanaged by the government. The World Bank report says that Pakistan, Afghanistan and Maldives may enter a recession as a result of this pandemic. The federal government has the responsibility of running the economy and now it has also the responsibility of protecting the lives and health of the people and securing their livelihood. It was ironic that the first relief package by the federal government was for the construction sector instead of doctors and nurses who risk their lives every single day.


Chairman PPP said that Pakistan will regret not spending a higher ratio of GDP on health. Whenever the PPP came to power, it drastically increased the spending on healthcare.


Bilawal Bhutto Zardari said that he is not only worried for Pakistan but also for other developing countries at the time of the global pandemic. He said that for the last decade from US to India we witnessed flirtation with nationalistic popularism and partisanship and moving away from multilateralism.


Chairman PPP said that we as a global community were not prepared to deal with such a pandemic and unfortunately, Pakistan did not forge national unity required to fight this pandemic.


https://www.ppp.org.pk/2020/04/23/chairman-ppp-bilawal-bhutto-zardari-appeals-to-muslims-across-the-world-and-in-pakistan-to-stay-at-home-and-pray-at-home/

No comments: