Hundreds of Thousands of Pakistan traders have shuttered their shops, striking over soaring energy and fuel bills stirring widespread discontent ahead of national elections. Punjab Bar Council also boycotted the court proceedings in the province and joined the protest rallies in all major cities like Multan, Faisalabad, Lahore, Bahawalpur, Dera Ghazi Khan, Gujranwala, Sargodha , Sahiwal, Rawalpindi, Muzaffargarh and Rahimyar khan. It was a successful strike after two decades.
There were widespread market closures on Saturday in Multan, Lahore, Karachi and Peshawar, where abandoned bazaars were posted with placards decrying “the unreasonable increase in electricity bills and taxes”.Pakistan election body to draw new boundaries as polls likely “Everyone is participating because the situation has become unbearable now,” Lahore’s Township Traders Union president Ajmal Hashmi told AFP news agency.
“Some relief must be given so people can put food on the table.”
Decades of mismanagement and instability have hobbled Pakistan’s economy, and this summer Islamabad was forced into a deal with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to avert default
However, the global lender demanded that popular subsidies cushioning living costs be slashed. Petrol and electricity prices have rocketed.
Traders wield immense power in Pakistan, and with an election due in the coming months the government faces the delicate task of keeping them onside while sticking to IMF austerity measures.
On Friday, caretaker Prime Minister Anwaar-ul-Haq Kakar said citizens would have to pay inflated bills as there is no “second option”.
“When you subsidise, you shift your fiscal obligations to the future. Rather than addressing the issue, you just delay it,” he told reporters in Islamabad.
The government raised petrol prices past the threshold of 300 rupees ($1) per litre (0.26 gallons) for the first time this week. That exchange rate against the dollar is the lowest in the nation’s 76-year history.
Pakistan's government says no relief on power bills as protests escalate
Meanwhile, new data showed year-on-year inflation in August stood at 27.4 percent, with motor fuel bills up eight per cent in July.“The bills we have received this month exceed our earnings,” said Babar Mahmood, president of the Electronics Market Traders Union in Lahore.
“There is a growing disconnect between the general public and those in positions of power.”
A caretaker government has been ruling Pakistan since parliament was dissolved last month, charged with ushering in elections, although no date has yet been announced.
The interim leadership, and the terms of the IMF deal, were hashed out by previous Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif at the helm of a shaky coalition that battled to turn around the economy in its short tenure after removing Imran Khan in 2022.
Khan, Pakistan’s most popular politician, is in prison battling a slew of legal cases he says are intended to keep him from contesting the polls.Meanwhile, the nation also faces a worsening security situation with nine soldiers killed in a suicide attack on Thursday.