غیرمنتحب نمائندےوزیراعظم کوکاروبارمیںسہولت پیدا کرنے کےنام پردھوکہ دےرہےہیں

There is only 1

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
کاروبار میں فلحال کوئی آسانی نہیں پیدا ہوئی ، بات سچ ہے
ایک باجوہ صاحب نے سستی بجلی لانے کی امید دلائی ہے اور بس
 

Wanderer_147

Politcal Worker (100+ posts)
میڈیا میں لفظ "غیر منتخب نمائندہ" کا ذکرایسے کرتے ہیں جیسے یہ کوئی گالی ہو یا پرانے زمانے کے شودر، دلت ہوں جن کا حکومتی معاملات میں کوئی حصہ نہیں۔ یہ حق صرف منتخب نمائندوں "برہمن" کا ہو۔
 

ARSHAD2011

Minister (2k+ posts)

This is last year's news, when Media high light this news, then govt took U-turn.. if its no free lunch then why took U-turn.
Updated September 03, 2019
https://www.dawn.com/news/1503225

Rs210bn GIDC write-off is ‘no free lunch’, says Omar

“It is not a free lunch to fertilizer or any other sector,” said Energy Minister Omar Ayub Khan at a hurriedly called joint news conference with Special Assistant to Prime Minister on Petroleum Nadeem Babar who said the GIDC waiver ordinance was drawn up on the pattern of GIDC (Amendment) Act introduced by the PML-N government for a similar settlement with the CNG sector. — Photo courtesy Omar Ayub Twitter/File

ISLAMABAD: The government on Monday defended its decision to write off about Rs210 billion to big businesses out of their outstanding Rs420bn bills on account of Gas Infrastructure Development Cess (GIDC), saying it gave up ‘uncertain’ past bills to secure a lower but more certain future revenue stream.

“It is not a free lunch to fertilizer or any other sector,” said Energy Minister Omar Ayub Khan at a hurriedly called joint news conference with Special Assistant to Prime Minister on Petroleum Nadeem Babar who said the GIDC waiver ordinance was drawn up on the pattern of GIDC (Amendment) Act introduced by the PML-N government for a similar settlement with the CNG sector.

The minister said the fertilizer industry will have to submit to a forensic audit to determine if it had collected GIDC from farmers, and if so, to what extent and would have to refund such amounts to the farmers through future price adjustment or surrender these amounts to the government treasury.

“All industries that are part of the GIDC and contesting cases in courts would have to formally sign settlement agreements to withdraw their cases from the courts, pay 50pc of past arrears within 90 days upfront and avail half of GIDC rate in future,” Ayub said, adding that those who opt not to avail the option will be free to pursue court cases but they would not be entitled to lower rates once the cases are adjudicated.