Who is governor of balochistan 2011




















Image source, ISPR. Shahbaz Taseer seen after he was found, in a photo released by the military. Image source, AFP. Security forces say they received information Shahbaz Taseer was at this hotel near Quetta. Analysis: M Ilyas Khan, Islamabad. Official confirmation is still awaited. Image source, Handout. Shahbaz Taseer was kidnapped from Lahore in Salman Taseer, governor of Pakistan's Punjab province, was assassinated in Image source, EPA. Supporters of Mumtaz Qadri protested in Peshawar and other Pakistani cities following his execution.

The protesters blocked this road into Islamabad. Related Topics. Published 1 March Published 29 February Published 9 January Published 14 January In his brief handwritten resignation sent to President Alvi, Mr Yasinzai did not disclose the reason for stepping down. However, rumors about his resignation had started circulating over two months ago when Prime Minister Imran Khan visited Quetta. The provincial parliamentary party of the PTI during a meeting with the prime minister had demanded that Balochistan governor be appointed from the party.

However, Mr Yasinzai did not tender his resignation. He visited Islamabad and held a meeting with President Alvi. Later, political circles observed that Mr Yasinzai did not attend any function during the visit of the prime minister to the province.

Facebook Count. Twitter Share. They have been mounting a three-day protest vigil with the shrouded bodies of the victims of Thursday's attacks. The banned Sunni militant group Lashkar-e-Jhangvi said it carried out the bombings, which killed at least Prime Minister Raja Pervez Ashraf announced that the governor of Balochistan had been put in charge of running the province after talks in Quetta, with representatives of the Shia community. Protesters had previously rejected a delegation led by the Minister for Religious Affairs, Syed Khurshid Shah, which came to the city on Saturday.

The worst of Thursday's attacks targeted a snooker hall. A suicide bomber detonated his device and a car bomb was detonated minutes later as police, rescuers and media arrived. The president of the Shia Conference, Syed Dawood Agha, had told the BBC his community would not bury its dead until the army had given an assurance it would take administrative control of the city.

Among the dead was Quetta-based rights activist Irfan Ali, who was reportedly helping those wounded in the first blast.



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