Government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa

Government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa

Provincial Government Seal

Provincial Government Flag
Seat of Government Peshawar
Legislature
Assembly
Speaker Asad Qaiser
Members in Assembly 124
Executive
Governor Mehtab Ahmed Khan
Chief Minister Pervez Khattak
Chief Secretary Muhammad Shehzad
Judiciary
High Court Peshawar High Court
Chief Justice Justice Mazhar Alam Miankhel

The Government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (Pashto:دخیبر پښتو‌نخواحکومت, Urdu: حکومتِ خیبرپختونخوا) is the provincial government of 26 Districts[1] of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan. The provincial government is composed of three distinct branches: legislative, executive and judicial, whose powers are vested by the Constitution of Pakistan, in the Provincial Assembly of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, the Governor, and the provincial ourts, including the High Court, respectively. The powers and duties of these branches are further defined by acts of Assembly, including the creation of executive departments and courts inferior to the High Court.

The full name of the province is "Khyber Pakhtunkhwa". No other name appears in the Constitution, and this is the name that appears in treaties and in legal cases to which it is a party. The terms "Government of the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa" or "Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Government" are often used in official documents to represent the provincial government as distinct from other provinces of Pakistan. The seat of government is in Peshawar is commonly used as a capital for the provincial government.

Structure

The Government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa functions under the provisions of the Constitution of Pakistan (1973). The Province has a Provincial Assembly with 124 elected members, constituent of 99 Regular seats, 22 seats reserved for women and 3 seats for non-Muslims. The Provincial Assembly elects the Chief Minister of the Province who forms a Cabinet of Ministers to look after various Departments. The Chief Minister is the Chief Executive of the Province. The Federal Government appoints a Governor as head of the Provincial Government.

The bureaucratic machinery of the province is headed by a Chief Secretary, who coordinates and supervises functions of various Departments headed by Departmental Secretaries. All the Secretaries are assisted by Additional Secretaries, Deputy Secretaries, Section Officers and other staff. The Departments may have attached Departments and autonomous or semi-autonomous bodies to look after various functions.

Since the year 2001, the system of elected District Governments has been introduced. The Province is divided into 24 districts. The Districts are headed by a Zila Nazim or district mayor assisted by a District Coordination Officer, in charge of district bureaucracy. In a District the functions are devolved further to the Tehsil, Town and Union Council Governments. Each District has an elected Zilla Council, elected Tehsil, Town and Union Councils who look after various activities at their respective levels.

At district level a District Police Officer looks after the Law and Order and he reports to the Zila Nazim. Each district has a Public Safety Commission which addresses public complaints against the Police. There is a Provincial Police Officer who is in charge of the Police system at the provincial level.

Legislative Branch

The 124 seats of the Assembly in 2013

The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Provincial Assembly is the legislative branch of the provincial government. It is unicameral legislature.

Powers of Assembly

The Constitution grants numerous powers to Assembly. Enumerated in Article 123(3), 130, 141 and 142 the Constitution of Pakistan, these include the powers to manage the purse of the province, to keep checks on the policies and practices of the government and to make laws.

Makeup of Assembly

The Assembly currently consists of 124 voting members, each of whom represents a provincial district. The number of representatives each province has in the Assembly is based on each province's population as determined in the most recent Census. All 124 representatives serve a five-year term. Each district receives a minimum of one representative in the Assembly. In order to be elected as a representative, an individual must be at least 18 years of age, and must be only a Pakistani citizen and his name appears on the electoral roll for any area in the Province. There is no limit on the number of terms a representative may serve.

Executive Branch

The executive post in the provincial government is the Governor of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa although power is delegated to the Chief Minister, Cabinet members and other officials. The governor is designated by the President on the advice of the Prime Minister and Chief Minister normally regarded a ceremonial post.

Governor

The executive branch consists of the Governor. The Governor is the head of province. The Governor, according to the Constitution, must "take care that the laws be faithfully executed", and "preserve, protect and defend the Constitution". The last Governor Methab Ahmed Khan Abbasi resigned on Feb 10,2016 because the charge of governorship was keeping him away from political activities. Fazal-ur-Rehman of JUI-F tried to grab the position for his own party but was unsuccessful and Prime Minister of Pakistan transferred the responsibility to his close associate Iqbal Zafar Jhagra on 4 March 2016.

The Governor may sign legislation passed by Provincial Assembly into law or may veto in the case of a bill other than a Money Bill preventing it from becoming law unless two-thirds of Provincial Assembly vote to override the veto.

Chief Minister

The Chief Minister is the Chief Executive of the province hence is the head of government. Under the Constitution, the Chief Minister is Leader of House. By virtue of this role, he or she is the head of the Assembly. In that capacity, the Chief Minister is allowed to vote in the Assembly. The current Chief Minister is Pervez Khattak

Cabinet and Cabinet-Level Officials

The day-to-day enforcement and administration of provincial laws is in the hands of the various provincial departments, created by Assembly to deal with specific areas of provincial and national affairs. The heads of the departments, are chosen by the Governor from members of the Provincial Asse
mbly and then approved with the "advice and consent" of Chief Minister generally known as the Chief Minister's "Cabinet".

KPK Accountability Commission

For the first time ever in the history of any provincial government, the PTI led government of KPK presented an amendment in the parliament for the establishment of a provincial Accountability Commission. The bill was passed and KPK Ehtesab Cell was set up in 2014. KPK government as per its claim kept the Commission away from any political pressure and first time in the history of Pakistan, a serving Minister Ziaullah Afridi was arrested for corruption and misuse of Authority by any Law forcing agency. KPK Ehtesab Cell claims of recovering as much as 2 billion rupees from the corrupt bureaucrats and politicians. A controversy was created in January 2016 on amending the Accountability Law and Director General Ehtesab Commission resigned on the reservations in amendments. However, the Law was reverted back through an ordinance by Chief Minister of KPK.

The Cabinet officers are listed below:

Office Incumbent Term Began

Chief Minister

May 31, 2013

Minister of the Minister of Health, ST & IT

June 17, 2013

Minister of Revenue and Estate

June 17, 2013

Minister for E & S Education
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Minister of Elementary and Secondary Education

June 17, 2013

Minister for Sports, Culture, Archeology and Youth Affairs

Mahmood Khan
June 17, 2013

Minister of Excise & Taxation

Mian Jamshed ud Din
May 17, 2014

Minister of Zakat & Usher
Minister of Religious Affairs

Habib Ur Rehman
June 17, 2013

Minister of Food

Qalandar Khan Lodhi
May 17, 2014

Minister for Agriculture

Ikram ullah khan Gandapur
May 17, 2014

Minister for Information
Minister for Higher Education

Mushtaq Ahmad Ghani
May 17, 2014

Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Minister of Public Health Engineering

Shah Farman
May 17, 2014

Minister of Local Government and Rural Development

Inayatullah Khan
June 17, 2013

Minister for Finance

Muzaffar Said Advocate
June 17, 2013

Minister of Law

Imtiaz Shahid
June 17, 2014

Judicial Branch

The Judiciary explains and applies the laws. This branch does this by hearing and eventually making decisions on various legal cases.

Provincial Departments

  • Department of Information
  • Department of Irrigation
  • Department of Law
  • Department of Local Government
  • Department of Minerals Development
  • Department of Planning & Development
  • Department of Revenue & Estate
  • Department of Sports & Tourism
  • Department of Transport
  • Department of Zakat & Ushr
Government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Mil Mi 17 helicopter.

See also

References

  1. Bureau Report. "KP govt creates new Kohistan district". dawn.com. Retrieved 26 July 2015.
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