A ‘national govt’ is suggested by the TTAP chief to guarantee transparent elections.

Mahmood Khan Achakzai, the leader of Tehreek Tahaffuz-e-Aiyeen Pakistan (TTAP), has suggested that a national government be established for four months in order to conduct clean elections, following which the winning party should be given power.
After meeting with Qaumi Awami Tehreek (QAT) chief Ayaz Latif Palijo at his Hyderabad home on Saturday, Achakzai told reporters that the country’s current leaders are incapable of running it and that a three-day roundtable conference with all relevant parties is necessary to get it back on track, according to The News.
The delegation also included Majlis Wahdat-e-Muslimeen leader Allama Raja Nasir Abbas and former National Assembly speaker Asad Qaiser.
He suggested that five major political parties should make up the national government. He stated that all of the opposition’s worries have now been validated and that the TTAP was established to fend off attacks on the Constitution.
According to the TTAP chief, who also serves as the chairman of the Pashtunkhwa Milli Awami Party, the nation will only advance if parliamentary supremacy is upheld and all provinces and nationalities are granted their proper rights.
He cited Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah as saying that “today there is a need for a movement to remove those counterfeit coins from the system.” Jinnah once noted that his pockets were full of counterfeit coins.
He claimed that as Pakistan is a federation of countries, it can only run successfully if all ethnic groups are granted equal rights and a proportionate amount of influence.
Ayaz Latif Palijo, the head of Qatar, had earlier expressed gratitude to Achakzai and the delegation for coming to Hyderabad. He claimed that his party has previously participated in political coalitions, such as the MRD, and that the present coalition was formed in an effort to “restore democracy through a political struggle.”
Palijo also called the Peca Act a restriction on journalistic freedom, attacked the 26th Constitutional Amendment, and claimed limitations on courts. He stated that Sindh was constantly under strain and that the province’s share of the NFC and other expenditures had been cut.
According to Allama Raja Nasir Abbas, the average person always bears the brunt of a catastrophe. He claimed that while PTI founder Imran Khan, whom he described as the most popular leader in the nation, is imprisoned in what he called fake charges, innocent individuals, including female leaders like Yasmin Rashid, are languishing in bars.
He called for “restoration of the Constitution,” “a democratic government,” and fast elections.
Asad Qaiser, the former speaker of the National Assembly, claimed that the national government is operating in “violation of law and constitutional norms, and that institutions have been compromised.”
The government of Sindh was attacked by him for “poor infrastructure, lack of clean drinking water, and deteriorating road conditions.” He urged people to support protests and a strike on February 8, claiming that the public mandate was stolen through Form-47.
The political leaders concurred that the country’s existence now depends on the restoration of true democracy and constitutional rule.
As part of commemorating GM Syed’s 122nd birthday, a TTAP delegation travelled to Sann and spoke to the crowd. Participants were urged by the delegation to back and join the February 8 strike.