Fawad Chaudhry terms contract of economy a 'stupid thought'


  •  Fawad says "no rational individual" could uphold "tragic monetary approaches of wrongdoing clergyman's administration".
  • He expresses a huge number of individuals who partook in PTI's Lahore Jalsa pronounced there was no genuine opportunity in country.
  • He keeps up with the occupant govt was is "a visitor for a couple of additional weeks".

PTI's Senior Vice President Fawad Chaudhry on Sunday once again criticized the incumbent government's policies and termed PM Shehbaz Sharif's ide proposal for a charter of the economy a "foolish idea". 

The former information and broadcasting minister took a jibe at PM Shehbaz and said that "the refusal of the head of the imported government to hold elections is a reflection of his desire to cling to power at all costs".

"This charter economy is a silly idea. Political parties only join heads to develop a political framework. Having a unanimous economic framework is only found in communist systems," he wrote on Twitter.

He added that "no sane person" could support the "disastrous economic policies of the crime minister's government". 


Referring to PTI Chairman Imran Khan's jalsa in Lahore just before August 14, Fawad stated: "The previous evening, a great many individuals who partook in [PTI's] Lahore Jalsa proclaimed that the acknowledgment of the fantasy of opportunity was fragmented until genuine opportunity was accomplished."

"The cross country development has previously begun. Insha Allah, this administration is a visitor for a couple of additional weeks," he said.

A day prior, PM Shehbaz Sharif, in a broadcast address to the country, had expressed that there was no understanding of a country's freedom without financial confidence.

The state leader emphasized his require the development of a "contract of the economy", saying that the opportunity has arrived for Pakistan to head in the correct course.

"We ought to keep public interest above private interest as genuine political administration doesn't look towards the following decisions, yet at the eventual fate of the future," he has said.

"In particular, we should resuscitate the enthusiasm that prompted the formation of Pakistan," he said, noticing that this energy will prompt the foundation of an extraordinary country.


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