KP Chief Minister Pervez Khattak has said that in the general elections 2018, PTI on the basis of its performance will win 70 general provincial assembly seats from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. Addressing a public meeting at Seoko, district Kohat Sunday, he said that due to the establishment of the supremacy of transparency and merit even the alliance of all political parties will not be in position to compete their party.
Members of KP Assembly including Zar Gul Khan, Engr Bakht Biland Khan, social workers Shams-ur-Rehman, Noor Ali, Abdullah Shah and other local elites also addressed the public meeting. On this occasion, the chief minister announced the construction of 28-kilometer roads, tehsil headquarters hospital, up-gradation of Govt Middle School to high level, sports' ground and other development projects and assured their inclusion in the annual development programme for upcoming financial year.
The chief minister said that on the demand of the people, Kohistan has been divided into three districts and different new tehsils have been established, whose single purpose is the delivery of services to the people at their doorsteps. He said that the people of Pakistan have become fed up of the present conventional politicians and when the PTI chief chanted the slogans of change then people stand behind him with a hope that the system based on the loot and plunder can be changed.
Pervez Khattak said that Imran Khan has no personal greed and has stand up for the service of the people. He said that instead of protecting their small vested interests and construction of roads, streets and drains, they should speak for their rights of education, health and injustice.
Talking about the reforms introduced by the provincial government, he said that social services institutions have been improved to deliver services to the people. He said that if a school has a building then it should also teachers and other facilities.
He said that nearly 25000 schools of the province were destroyed by flood, whose reconstruction was the responsibility of federal government, but it constructed only 3000 schools and the expenses on the reconstruction of the remaining schools was borne by the provincial government.