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PTI’s Governance in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa: Broken Promises, Stagnant Progress, and the Cost of Neglect

Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) swept to power in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) on a wave of promises for reform, modernization, and prosperity, vowing to address long-standing issues and elevate the province’s standards in every sector. With slogans of an “Educational Emergency” and a 100-billion-rupee budget surplus, PTI’s rhetoric seemed promising. Yet nearly a decade later, the realities on the ground paint a sobering picture of a province held hostage by broken promises, unaddressed grievances, and a legacy of inaction.


A Flawed Educational “Emergency”

In 2014, PTI declared an “Educational Emergency,” pledging to transform KP’s education sector. But after ten years, the province’s education system teeters on the edge of collapse. The most recent manifestation of this failure came in the form of a massive teachers’ strike, forcing the closure of 26,000 schools across the province. The strike wasn’t a one-day inconvenience but a public outcry against a government that has consistently failed to address the needs of its educators. Teachers took to the streets, demanding the basic dignity of a pay raise and better working conditions—demands that would hardly be necessary in a well-managed sector.

These mass closures left millions of students with interrupted education, their futures compromised by a government that claims financial health but cannot meet the fundamental needs of those shaping the province’s youth. PTI’s so-called “surplus budget” is incongruous with the actual conditions in the education sector, where classrooms are underfunded, teachers are overburdened, and administrative support is sorely lacking. What use is a surplus if it does not serve the people who generate it?


An Economy in Stagnation

Beyond education, KP’s economic situation is a stark reminder of the consequences of neglect and mismanagement. While the PTI government claims to prioritize development and economic progress, KP’s industries and businesses tell a different story. Rampant unemployment, faltering businesses, and a stagnant economy have left KP struggling to stay afloat. Factories have closed, industries have withered, and with them, the job market has shrunk, leaving thousands unemployed. For a province that relies heavily on local industries, this economic slowdown is catastrophic.

PTI’s emphasis has often seemed more focused on political grandstanding than on actual economic support. KP needed investments, infrastructure, and policy reforms to bolster its industrial sector, yet these priorities seem to have taken a back seat. Over three consecutive terms, the PTI government failed to deliver a coherent economic strategy that could sustain businesses and generate jobs. Today, the province faces a job crisis that grows worse with each passing year, while PTI continues to tout its political achievements without addressing this pressing reality.


The Rising Threat of Terrorism and Deteriorating Security

Security has long been a critical issue for KP, a province bordering Afghanistan and historically affected by militancy. While the PTI leadership has routinely stressed its commitment to maintaining peace, terrorism has again started to haunt KP’s landscape. Despite PTI’s rhetoric of a “Naya Pakistan” that would bring security and stability, KP has instead seen an alarming resurgence of terrorist activities. The government has failed to adopt a proactive approach to counter this threat, and its security policies appear inadequate to address the evolving nature of terrorism in the region.


PTI’s silence on this rising threat speaks volumes about its inability to fulfill one of its core promises—protecting the lives of KP’s citizens. Residents live in a perpetual state of fear, and the provincial government’s lack of a concrete strategy reflects a disturbing detachment from the very real concerns of those they govern.


Infrastructure: A Shattered Dream

PTI’s governance has also failed KP’s infrastructure. From roads to public buildings, the province’s structural backbone is crumbling, indicative of the neglect and lack of investment in public works. While PTI talks about transformation and development, basic infrastructure projects remain incomplete, and those that do exist often fall into disrepair. The effects are visible: dilapidated roads slow down transportation, public facilities are stretched beyond capacity, and rural areas face an acute lack of resources.


KP desperately needed an infrastructure plan that would modernize the province and make it more accessible and livable. However, PTI’s approach has left the province with little to show for the years it promised to elevate KP’s infrastructure. Instead, residents navigate broken roads and contend with crumbling facilities—ironic, given PTI’s claims of prioritizing the people’s needs.


Political Distractions Over Governance

One of the most glaring issues with PTI’s rule in KP is its misplaced focus on political maneuvering rather than governance. Since its ascent to power, PTI has consistently prioritized political grandstanding and nationwide protests over fulfilling its governance duties. The party’s focus has been on toppling governments, staging protests, and issuing threats rather than addressing the pressing issues faced by the province it governs.


PTI’s lack of attention to KP’s internal crises—whether economic, security, or infrastructural—underscores a leadership distracted by ambitions of national power rather than committed to provincial welfare. This neglect has left KP residents feeling abandoned, trapped in a cycle of frustration, and without the meaningful change they were promised.


KP’s Bleak Future Under PTI

Ultimately, PTI’s governance in KP has left the province worse off than it was a decade ago. KP’s residents are left asking: where did the promised change go? How does a government claiming budget surpluses fail to provide even basic support for education, infrastructure, and industry?

The legacy of PTI’s rule in KP is not one of prosperity but of disappointment. KP’s industries have suffered, its infrastructure has crumbled, its educational system has been left in tatters, and its people live in constant fear of a rising terrorist threat. As PTI continues to tout its accomplishments on the national stage, the people of KP are left dealing with the tangible repercussions of its ineffective governance: instability, broken institutions, and unfulfilled promises.

The people of KP deserve better. They deserve leaders who see governance as a commitment to service, not as a stepping stone for political maneuvering. The grim reality of PTI’s governance in KP is a lesson in the consequences of neglect and mismanagement—a reminder that the promises of “Naya Pakistan” have, for KP, remained empty words.


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