ISLAMABAD: The country has sufficient stocks of sugar to meet the demand for the next 22 days, a senior government official said.
The current stock of sugar is 130,000 tonnes, which is enough for the next 22 days and after 22 days, the sugar crushing season will start in Punjab, Minister for Information and Broadcasting Chaudhry Fawad Hussain told newsmen.
Quoting data from the Ministry of Industries, he said, 15,000 tonnes of sugar is consumed/day in the country, of which domestic consumers consume 6,000 tonnes, while 9,000 tonnes is used by the industrial sector, including the beverage companies.
Flanked by Minister for National Food Security and Research Fakhar Imam, he said the Sindh government was not releasing wheat, which resulted in price hike of the edibles in Sindh, in general, and, in Karachi, in particular.
Likewise, he said, the sugar crushing was yet to start in Sindh where the sugarcane crops’ yield arrived earlier than other parts of the country, which ultimately put the overall pressure on the commodity’s price.
Another reason for the spike in sugar prices was the financial speculation in the market, he added.
“As you know, most of the sugar mills in Sindh are working under Asif Ali Zardari, while in Punjab, they are owned by the Sharif family,” he said, adding that unfortunately, the private sector held their stocks, which stood at 90,000 tonnes.
About the action taken by the government against sugar hoarding, Fawad said: “We fixed the price of sugar at Rs90/kg, which also included Rs16/kg profit for the sugar mills.”
The private sugar mill-owners sought a stay order from the courts on the government actions for getting sugar stocks released from their godowns, he said.
“The matter is now pending in the court,” the minister said and appealed to the judiciary to decide the cases on merit at the earliest so that the government could overcome the crisis-like situation and pass on the relief to the public.
“We are not asking ‘the court’ to give the decision in favour of the government….at least start proceedings,” he said, adding that the stay on the matter of national importance created major problems.
Expressing hope for starting sugar crushing in Punjab, he said, the Sindh government had to start crushing from November 1, but there was no progress made as yet.
Fawad said that the hike in the essential commodities’ prices were mainly being reported from Karachi. The price of a wheat flour sack was Rs380 higher in the metropolitan area than the actual prices in Punjab and Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa.
Likewise, other edibles, including sugar, were being sold at the highest rate in Karachi, he added.
Fawad urged the Sindh government to clear its position on inflation. “Why it did not release wheat earlier and now refrain from starting crushing of sugar…what sort of agenda you people are pursuing and what actually you want?” He questioned.
The challenges being faced by the people in the urban Sindh was the result of the provincial government’s bad governance, he said, while pointing to the lawlessness in the province apparently due to the absence of police.
The people were being murdered in broad daylight and social media networking sites were flooded with such clips. It seemed that there was an environment of ‘jungle’ across the province, he added.
The minister urged the media to highlight the plight of the people of Sindh and put pressure on the provincial government to conduct independent inquiry into such matters.
About the increase in oil prices in the country, Fawad said the federal government brought taxes on the commodity to the lowest level, despite the rise in the petroleum prices in the international market so that the masses could be facilitated in all possible ways.
The government had collected only Rs50 billion in lieu of the petroleum levy. If the government had not cut taxes on the fuel and kept on charging like the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) government, the collection would have been over Rs450 billion.
According to the United Nations Food Agency, Fawad said that the world food prices hit a 10-year peak. The poverty rate in India was higher than Pakistan, while the petroleum prices in Pakistan was lower than India.
“We have to accept the realities and continue to move forward by keeping in view the situation prevailing world over,” he stressed.
Keeping in view inflation, he said, Prime Minister Imran Khan announced a mega relief package to provide 30 per cent subsidy on wheat flour, pulses and ghee to those, whose monthly income is less than Rs31,000.
About the PML-N senior leaders’ press conference, Fawad said, people don’t give any importance to their comments on the economy.
“Those who are telling us solutions are actually responsible for the current situation in Pakistan,” he added.
Regarding increase in the exchange rate, the minister said it was due to the PML-N government’s clumsy economic policies that led to de-industrialisation in the country.
Describing a time period from 2010 to 2018 as a worst decade, he said Pakistan’s loan increased to Rs27 trillion from Rs6. trillion in 10 years.
Both PML-N and Pakistan Peoples’ Party (PPP) took massive loans, amounting to Rs23 trillion, he added.
“This year alone, we had to repay loans, amounting to $10 billion and in the next year, we have to return loans, amounting to $12 billion,” he said, holding the previous governments responsible for the prevailing situation in the country.
Responding to the critics of the government, he said three years were not enough to reverse the damage caused by the bad economic policies of both the PML-N and PPP governments.
Fawad took jibe over PML-N senior leader Shahid Khaqan Abbasi for defending economic policies of his government in the media and said it was he who used to criticise the ‘worst’ policies of his own Finance Minister Ishaq Dar.
He asked Shahid Khaqan Abbasi and Miftah Ismail to show some courage to accept that they were also the critics of their own finance minister Ishaq Dar’s economic policies.
The minister said the public knew how the PML-N government in the past manipulated foreign exchange to limit one dollar to Rs100.















