Protest demonstrations and sit-ins continued across Pakistan’s Gilgit-Baltistan(GB) province for the 25th consecutive day, protesting against the local and federal governments’ decision to increase the price of subsidised wheat and other grievances.
Protesters gathered at various locations in Gilgit-Baltistan ( GB) , exerting pressure on the government to accept their demands. Protest rallies from different areas joined the sit-in held at Yadgar-i-Shuhada in Skardu ,a town of Gilgit-Baltistan province.
Meanwhile, a sit-in also continued at Gari Bagh in Gilgit. Protest demonstrations blocking the Karakoram Highway occurred at three points in Nagar district of the province. Similar demonstrations unfolded in the Yasin Valley of Ghizer district, and a rally unfolded in Kharmang district of the province. Earlier, demonstrations had been staged in Diamer, Astore, Ghanche, Shigar, and Kharmang districts.
Protesters have pledged to persist until their demands are met, asserting that the GB government has failed to address their genuine concerns despite their ongoing protests for the past four weeks.
GB Council members urge country caretaker PM to suspend price hike
They warned that the next phase of the protest would be dangerous if the government does not show flexibility. Ehsan Ali Advocate, the chief coordinator of Awami Action Committee (ACC), told Dawn that if their demands are not met in the coming days, the ACC will decide to start protest marches to Skardu and Gilgit from other areas of the province.
GB Council members, through a letter, requested the Pakistan caretaker Prime Minister Anwaarul Haq, who is also the chairman of the GB Council, to suspend the recent increase in wheat prices.
The letter, sent by GB Council members Ayub Shah, Hashmatullah Khan, and Shabiul Hasan, stated that the current increase in wheat prices has created a severe financial burden on the region, affecting the livelihoods of the people. They urged the both local and federal governments to re-examine its decision to increase in the price of wheat and to continue the subsidised wheat policy.
Meanwhile, addressing a press conference in Islamabad, GB Food Minister Ghulam Muhammad, accompanied by GB Minister of Law Sohail Abbas Shah and Minister of Planning Raja Nasir Ali Khan, announced that the GB government would not withdraw the decision to increase subsidised wheat rates.
He explained that the purpose of the increase was to overcome a wheat shortage in the region. He stated that the government faced a deficit of Rs7 billion to purchase and deliver subsidised wheat on the allocated funds.
Opposition members of the GB Assembly and GB Council agreed to support the protesters and jointly work to address their demands after a meeting of GB opposition leader Kazim Mesum and other opposition members and GB Council members.