Govt move to privatise Wapda's distribution firms rejected.

KARACHI -- Former Senate chairman and Pakistan Peoples Party leader Senator Raza Rabbani along with several trade unions and civil society organisations on Saturday highlighted the issue of privatisation of distribution and power generation companies of the Water and Power Development Authority (Wapda).

'It was only yesterday that the government increased per-unit tariff of power by almost Rs2. Petroleum prices are also being raised by this government. Increases in the cost of these two things alone give way to inflation, and inflation puts off stove fires in poor people's kitchens,' he told a press conference at the Karachi Press Club.

'On the other hand, this government provides benefits to crony capitalists, it gives NROs to the construction industry. Three days ago that NRO ordinance and incentives package was also given a six-month extension. But the workers, on whose shoulders rests the country's economy, are not seen as important,' he said.

Raza Rabbani says all public sector companies under federation come under CCI purview

Coming to the main issue, Mr Rabbani pointed out that the privatisation of distribution companies of Wapda was being done under agreements with the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank and the Asian Development Bank.

'Such agreements are kept secret. And hence our basic infrastructure industries like power generation units are being privatised, which may pose a threat or risk national security as the crony capitalists use your industry to serve their purpose,' he remarked.

'Unconstitutional' privatisation

He called the government's privatisation programme unconstitutional because all public sector companies under the federation come under the purview of the Council of Common Interests (CCI).

He said that earlier the collective bargaining agent (CBA) in all companies of Wapda was one and uniform but now the government had decided that each distribution company should have separate referendums and separate trade unions. 'It is an anti-worker step by the government,' he added.

He also reminded how the K-Electric had been privatised in 2005. 'Utilities are not privatised anywhere in the world. But here we privatised KE, saying that KE's new private management will invest in infrastructure. But have they done that even?'

Abdul Latif Nizamani, president of All Pakistan Wapda Hydro Electric Workers Union (CBA), said if Wapda were to be privatised, its workers will find...

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