DAWN.COM

Today's Paper | November 14, 2024

Updated 03 Sep, 2022 07:17pm

Shaukat Tarin urges govt to renegotiate with IMF, seek relief in the wake of floods

PTI leader and former finance minister Shaukat Tarin on Saturday urged the government to renegotiate and seek relief from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in the wake of disastrous floods, as he called it out for “leaking” the audios attributed to him regarding the programme.

Tarin’s presser was met with a scathing response from his successor Miftah Ismail later.

On Monday, two audio clips surfaced via TV channels and social media in which a man said to be Tarin can be heard guiding Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Punjab’s finance ministers to tell the federal government and the IMF that they would not be able to commit to a provincial budget surplus in light of the recent floods that have wreaked havoc in Pakistan.

Last week, KP Finance Minister Taimur Khan Jhagra had written a letter to the Ministry of Finance conveying his administration’s inability to provide a provincial surplus this year.

The audios triggered criticism against the PTI as the ruling coalition alleged that they were nothing but a conspiracy to derail the state’s deal with the global lender. Later, Law Minister Azam Nazir Tarar said that a forensic audit of the leaks would be conducted.

At a media talk in Karachi today, the former federal minister claimed that those who leaked the tapes mere hours before the IMF board meeting were the people who “wanted to jeopardise the deal”.

“Who leaked the tapes? We did not. We didn’t make the tapes, so how would we leak them,” he said.

“So were we jeopardising the programme or were you, by leaking the audios? You could have done it on Tuesday or later on. Why did you do it just before the meeting?”

Tarin claimed that the real problem would have arrived if the IMF would have heard the tapes. “Although it wouldn’t have affected the programme because the surpluses from provinces are in the form of an MoU (memorandum of understanding).”

Elaborating on the matter, he said that the PTI’s aim behind writing the letter was to spend money on the provinces — in the light of the floods. “So that we could go and tell them to give us relief the way they did during Covid.

“We believe in the well-being of the country,” the PTI leader said.

He recalled that in January when the previous government was going to the global lender for the sixth review, it had faced massive criticism from the opposition.

“Their top leadership had said that the IMF agreement should be torn and called it an attack on the sovereignty. But we never called them traitors, instead, we took it as political discourse.”

Expressing disappointment at the accusations of being a traitor, Tarin said that it was high time all the political parties, including the PTI, moved past it. “In a democracy, you have the freedom to voice both agreement and dissent.

“We have a disaster in front of us and it calls for us to unite and fight it together,” he said and advised the government to provide relief to the people in these testing times.

Read more: Inflation, global conditions will continue to weigh on Pakistan’s economy, says IMF

“I am seeing that our common folk will see more burden in the upcoming days because they [the government] will increase taxes and it will have a ripple effect […] and the reason is that they have accepted IMF’s special conditionalities,” he pointed out, citing increasing inflation and appreciating dollar.

The PTI leader emphasised that the country would have to stand up to these conditionalities today — which include an increase in taxes and electricity prices.

“Go to them and ask them for relief. After that go to Russia and buy discounted oil. Give people relief on petrol and gas [prices]. Increase your tax revenue.”

“Don’t waste your time on giving certificates of traitors. We want to work on this together,” Tarin added.

‘Nation won’t forgive you’

Finance Minister Miftah Ismail issued a scathing response to Tarin later in the day while talking to the media in Karachi.

He blasted the PTI government for its performance and lashed out at Tarin over the allegedly leaked audio clips.

Ismail also said that Tarin had assured the IMF of increasing fuel prices in April if the PTI government survived the vote of no-confidence.

“Did Imran Khan not say to the Finance Division that ‘I will raise petrol prices after the first week of April’? If this was not said and I’ve been lied to then I apologise,” Ismail said in a fiery statement.

He called on Tarin to tell if he had allegedly informed the IMF of such an increase or not. “We know your reality and the nation does too now. The reality is that you’ve been selling this mixture of lies,” he added.

“If you want to do politics then go ahead but the nation won’t forgive you because it has seen your reality.”

Regarding economic issues, Ismail said the country was saved from default and the economy had stabilised, although inflation was very high.

The finance minister assured that inflation would be absolutely brought under control in the next two months.

Read Comments

Pakistan ‘may withdraw’ from Champions Trophy after India refuse to cross the border Next Story