Barabri Party Pakistan

Political party in Pakistan From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Barabri Party Pakistan[2][3] (Urdu: برابری پارٹی پاکستان abbr. BPP), a political party founded in 2017 by musician/singer, political activist, social worker and intellectual Jawad Ahmad.[4] The party's name, Barabri, is an Urdu word meaning 'equality' because the fundamental underlying philosophy of the party is equitable distribution of resources and equality of access to opportunities for all citizens of Pakistan regardless of race, religion, ethnicity, nationality or gender.

Urdu nameبرابری پارٹی پاکستان
AbbreviationBPP
ChairmanJawad Ahmad
Vice ChairmanDr. Shahnaz Khan
Quick facts Urdu name, Abbreviation ...
Barabri Party Pakistan
برابری پارٹی پاکستان
Urdu nameبرابری پارٹی پاکستان
AbbreviationBPP
ChairmanJawad Ahmad
Vice ChairmanDr. Shahnaz Khan
FounderJawad Ahmad
Founded2018
HeadquartersJohar Town Lahore, Pakistan
IdeologyEgalitarianism
Political positionLeft-wing
Colors    Green, Gold, Red
SloganRoti, Khana, Kapra, Makaan, Ghar, Tahafuz, Taleem, Sehat or Rozgaar, Bijli, Pani, Transport, Insaaf, RAYASAAT IN KI ZIMMEDAAR.
Election symbol
Pen (Qalam)[1]
Party flag
Website
Barabri Party Pakistan
Close

Ideology

The fundamental underlying ideology of the party is leftist, and socialist, with social ownership, and socialist democracy being some of its main tenets. Equality of access over opportunities and resources for all citizens of Pakistan regardless of race, religion, ethnicity, nationality or gender. [5]

General elections 2018

BPP fielded 12 candidates for 5 Provincial and 7 National Assembly, including one woman, in 2018 elections, all of them belonging to the middle class, working class and youth, against the political stalwarts in the country. Jawad Ahmad[6][7][8][9] himself challenged Imran Khan, Nawaz Sharif, Maryam Nawaz, Shahid Khaqan Abbasi, Aleem Khan (politician), Altaf Hussain (Pakistani politician), Shehbaz Sharif and Bilawal Bhutto[10][11] representing the three major political parties in Pakistan, in 2018 elections. He believes that these parties represent the elites in the country and election is a form of business for these parties. Jawad Ahmad further elaborates that ninety-nine percent of Pakistan population belongs to the middle and working class and unless candidates representing this ninety-nine percent of the population enter the parliament to work on people-centric legislation, nothing will change and status quo will keep on existing.[12]

See also

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI