In the United States in 1982, with 21 members of the Council on Agriculture and the Second Council. In 1984, Mir Zafarullah Jamali was the chief de-mission of the Pakistan Olympic Group for the Los Angeles Olympic Games, from which the Pakistan hockey team won a gold medal.
In the non-party elections held by the Zia government in March 1985, Mir Zafarullah Khan Jamali was elected unopposed as a member of the National Assembly from his constituency of Jaffarabad in Balochistan province. He was echoed by President General Zia-ul-Haq as the Prime Minister of the country, but since Elahi Bakhsh Soomro and Mohammad Khan Junejo from Sindh were also candidates against him, the lot was drawn for Mohammad Khan Junejo and he was nominated as the Prime Minister by the Zia government. Who formed the government at the center and made Mir Zafarullah Khan Jamali a minister in his cabinet.
On May 29, 1988, when President General Zia-ul-Haq introduced Article 58 after the Eighth Amendment to the 1973 Constitution. After dismissing the government of Prime Minister Muhammad Khan Junejo under B (2) and announcing the dissolution of the Federal Cabinet, National and Provincial Assemblies, caretaker governments were formed at the Center and in the provinces till the next elections. For this, on June 24, 1988, Mir Zafarullah Khan Jamali was made the caretaker Chief Minister of Balochistan. President General Zia-ul-Haq died in a plane crash on August 17, 1988, after which party-based elections were held in the country in November 1988, with PPP leader Benazir Bhutto forming the government at the center and no party in the Balochistan Assembly. He could not get a majority to form a government in the province.
Zafarullah Khan Jamali had won both the national and provincial seats on the IJI ticket in those elections and in the latest situation, he left the National Assembly seat and tried to get the Chief Ministership. In Balochistan, there was no choice but to form a joint ministry. But even in that, who was with whom? Maulana Darkhasti of Jamiat Umayyad Islam had announced that he would not support Nawab Akbar Bugti in forming the government. Meanwhile, two groups came forward for a joint ministry and Muhammad Khan Barozai of Pakistan Peoples Party was also elected Speaker. ۔ After which, when the vote for the post of Chief Minister was held, both the groups got 21 votes.
When Maulana Darkhasti did not participate in the referendum, the Speaker exercised his right to vote and made Zafarullah Khan Jamali successful. Thus a mixed ministry was formed and the post of Chief Minister remained with Mir Zafarullah Khan Jamali. But then, just a few days later, on December 15, 1988, the Governor General of Balochistan, Musa Khan, dissolved the Balochistan Joint Ministry and the Provincial Assembly due to disagreement among the members of the Assembly. Later, on the restoration of the Balochistan Provincial Assembly following a High Court decision, a new joint ministry was formed by Nawab Akbar Bugti, then President of the Pakistan Muslim League Muhammad Khan Junejo separated him from the party. But he then took refuge at the feet of Nawaz Sharif.
In the October 1990 general elections, Mir Zafarullah Khan Jamali once again contested the National Assembly seat from Jaffarabad constituency as the joint candidate of the IJI and Nawab Akbar Bugti's Jamhoori Watan Party. AK candidate Mir Nabi Bakhsh lost to Khoso. Interestingly, Zafarullah Khan Jamali blamed the defeat on Nawab Akbar Bugti and the district administration. In any case, he cooperated with the government of the day and so he once again represented Pakistan at the UN General Assembly in 1991. Later, after the death of Muhammad Khan Junejo, when Mian Nawaz Sharif became the President of the Pakistan Muslim League, he was first paid tribute through televised interviews but later criticized Nawaz Sharif for assuming the party presidency.
In the political crisis of 1993, he fully supported the lobby of the Muslim League (Junejo) to overthrow Nawaz Sharif's government, which was trying to overthrow the Nawaz government. Then, when the country held another general election in October 1993, he won the National Assembly election as the sole independent candidate while holding the post of Senior Vice President of the Pakistan Muslim League (Junejo).
After the overthrow of the governments of Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto and Mian Nawaz Sharif in August 1990 and July 1993, respectively, once again in October 1993, Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto formed the government at the Center on behalf of the Pakistan Peoples Party and its allies. He also made his nominee Sardar Farooq Ahmad Khan Leghari successful for the post of President.
Zafarullah Jamali and the President of Pakistan Sardar Farooq Ahmad Khan Leghari were very close friends, so most of the newspapers reported that the two holiday hunting and tourism together and a couple of government members and friends are also together. But in the meantime, there were some allegations of corruption against Benazir Bhutto's government that her own elected president, Sardar Farooq Ahmad Khan Leghari, accused her government of violating Article 58 of the 1973 constitution. He dismissed the National Assembly under B2 and appointed caretaker Prime Minister Malik Meraj Khalid and announced new elections in the country. Zafarullah Khan Jamali was made the caretaker Chief Minister of Balochistan Province on November 9, 1997. He remained in that post until February 22, 1997, and then March 199.On April 1, 1970, the military government of President General Yahya Khan revoked the One Unit Order of West Pakistan and announced the creation of four provinces and Balochistan as a province. Lasbela and Naseerabad sub-districts were included in Balochistan. Mir Zafarullah Jamali had participated in the anti-President Field Marshal Ayub Khan campaign in the presidential election of Ms. Fatima Jinnah during her student days and she had reached political maturity by 1970. He also participated in the provincial elections but lost. He did not give up and decided to take part in politics regularly for the next few years. In this regard, he joined the Pakistan People's Party. In the March 1977 provincial elections, Mir Zafarullah Jamali was elected a member of the Balochistan Assembly on a PPP ticket and was appointed Minister of Food, Information and Parliamentary Affairs.
The PPP split in 1979 due to better relations with him under President General Zia-ul-Haq's martial law, and then in the Union Cabinet from 1980 to 1984, first as Minister of State for Food and Agriculture and Cooperatives and then as Minister for Local Government and Rural Development. During this time he represented Pakistan at the UN General Assembly in 1980. In 1981, he led a Pakistani delegation to a conference of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations in Rome. He led Pakistani delegations on two other occasions: one at the Islamic Agriculture Conference in Ankara, Turkey, and the other in the United States in 1982 with 21 members of the Majlis-e-Shura. In 1984, Mir Zafarullah Jamali was the chief de-mission of the Pakistan Olympic Group for the Los Angeles Olympic Games, from which the Pakistan hockey team won a gold medal.
In the non-party elections held by the Zia government in March 1985, Mir Zafarullah Khan Jamali was elected unopposed as a member of the National Assembly from his constituency of Jaffarabad in Balochistan province. He was echoed by President General Zia-ul-Haq as the Prime Minister of the country, but since Elahi Bakhsh Soomro and Mohammad Khan Junejo from Sindh were also candidates against him, the lot was drawn for Mohammad Khan Junejo and he was nominated as the Prime Minister by the Zia government. Who formed the government at the center and made Mir Zafarullah Khan Jamali a minister in his cabinet.
On May 29, 1988, when President General Zia-ul-Haq introduced Article 58 after the Eighth Amendment to the 1973 Constitution. After dismissing the government of Prime Minister Muhammad Khan Junejo under B (2) and announcing the dissolution of the Federal Cabinet, National and Provincial Assemblies, caretaker governments were formed at the Center and in the provinces till the next elections. For this, on June 24, 1988, Mir Zafarullah Khan Jamali was made the caretaker Chief Minister of Balochistan. President General Zia-ul-Haq died in a plane crash on August 17, 1988, after which party-based elections were held in the country in November 1988, with PPP leader Benazir Bhutto forming the government at the center and no party in the Balochistan Assembly. He could not get a majority to form a government in the province.
Zafarullah Khan Jamali had won both the national and provincial seats on the IJI ticket in those elections and in the latest situation, he left the National Assembly seat and tried to get the Chief Ministership. In Balochistan, there was no choice but to form a joint ministry. But even in that, who was with whom? Maulana Darkhasti of Jamiat Umayyad Islam had announced that he would not support Nawab Akbar Bugti in forming the government. Meanwhile, two groups came forward for a joint ministry and Muhammad Khan Barozai of Pakistan Peoples Party was also elected Speaker. ۔ After which, when the vote for the post of Chief Minister was held, both the groups got 21 votes.
When Maulana Darkhasti did not participate in the referendum, the Speaker exercised his right to vote and made Zafarullah Khan Jamali successful. Thus a mixed ministry was formed and the post of Chief Minister remained with Mir Zafarullah Khan Jamali. But then, just a few days later, on December 15, 1988, the Governor General of Balochistan, Musa Khan, dissolved the Balochistan Joint Ministry and the Provincial Assembly due to disagreement among the members of the Assembly. Later, on the restoration of the Balochistan Provincial Assembly following a High Court decision, a new joint ministry was formed by Nawab Akbar Bugti, then President of the Pakistan Muslim League Muhammad Khan Junejo separated him from the party. But he then took refuge at the feet of Nawaz SharifIn the October 1990 general elections, Mir Zafarullah Khan Jamali once again contested the National Assembly seat from Jaffarabad constituency as the joint candidate of IJI and Nawab Akbar Bugti's Jamhoori Watan Party. AK candidate Mir Nabi Bakhsh lost to Khoso. Interestingly, Zafarullah Khan Jamali blamed the defeat on Nawab Akbar Bugti and the district administration. In any case, he cooperated with the government of the day and so he once again represented Pakistan at the UN General Assembly in 1991. Later, after the death of Muhammad Khan Junejo, when Mian Nawaz Sharif became the President of the Pakistan Muslim League, he was first paid tribute through televised interviews but later criticized Nawaz Sharif for assuming the party presidency.
In the political crisis of 1993, he fully supported the lobby of the Muslim League (Junejo) to overthrow Nawaz Sharif's government, which was trying to overthrow the Nawaz government. Then, when the country held another general election in October 1993, he won the National Assembly election as the sole independent candidate while holding the post of Senior Vice President of the Pakistan Muslim League (Junejo).
After the overthrow of the governments of Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto and Mian Nawaz Sharif in August 1990 and July 1993, respectively, once again in October 1993, Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto formed the government at the Center on behalf of the Pakistan Peoples Party and its allies. He also made his nominee Sardar Farooq Ahmad Khan Leghari successful for the post of President.
Zafarullah Jamali and the President of Pakistan Sardar Farooq Ahmad Khan Leghari were very close friends, so most of the newspapers reported that the two holiday hunting and tourism together and a couple of government members and friends are also together. But in the meantime, there were some allegations of corruption against Benazir Bhutto's government that her own elected president, Sardar Farooq Ahmad Khan Leghari, accused her government of violating Article 58 of the 1973 constitution. He dismissed the National Assembly under B2 and appointed caretaker Prime Minister Malik Meraj Khalid and announced new elections in the country. In Balochistan Province, Zafarullah Khan Jamali was made the caretaker Chief Minister on November 9, 1997. He remained in that post till February 22, 1997 and was elected Center in March 1997.
Following the victory of the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) in the February 1997 elections, Mian Nawaz Sharif formed the government at the Center. A year later, as President of Pakistan, he announced that general elections would be held on October 10, 2002. Almost all the political parties of the country participated in these elections and political alliances were formed.
A political party by the name of Pakistan Muslim League (Q) was also participating in these elections with Mir Zafarullah Khan Jamali as its Secretary General and in the eyes of the people this party was also blessed by the Presidency. Mir Zafarullah Jamali did not want to run in the elections but when his son Farid Jamali's papers were rejected, he had to contest as he had also submitted his papers cautiously. Also elected.
In terms of election results, no party was in a position to form a government at the center, but the PML-Q could have tried to form a coalition government due to the large number of seats in the National Assembly, and so on. While other parties were also trying to form a coalition government in the form of any coalition at the center. Negotiations between the political parties have been going on for a long time, but no government has been formed and no candidate has been fielded for the post of the next prime minister. After some time, when the PML-Q saw an opportunity to form a government, the party president Chaudhry Shujaat Hussain suggested that the prime minister should be taken from a small province, although everyone thought that he should take over the post himself. Will Among the names that came to light were Zubaida Jalal, Sardar Yar Muhammad Rind, Pir Abdul Qadir Gilani and Mir Zafarullah Khan Jamali.Meet Thus, there was no obstacle from the parliament, the ruling political party and the allies of the government to make the LFO a part of the constitution and even the Prime Minister Zafarullah Jamali welcomed it. The two major parliamentary alliances, the MMA and the ARD, refused to accept the LFO. He even asked President General Pervez Musharraf to take off his uniform. Thus began a great spectacle between the Jamali government and the opposition. Sometimes an attempt was made to negotiate and sometimes a threat of a protest campaign.
On April 29, 2003, a committee consisting of members of the government and the opposition was announced, but to no avail. On June 12, 2003, the opposition threatened to walk out of parliament and launch a prison-wide movement. On June 14, 2003, in the absence of the opposition, the National Assembly passed the budget, and on the same day, the Speaker of the National Assembly, Amir Hussain, gave a rolling motion to make the LFO part of the constitution. The opposition later accused the speaker of being biased. Therefore, Amir Hussain has no right to remain in this post and on June 20, 2003, a no-confidence motion was filed against the Speaker of the National Assembly. A week later, the no-confidence motion was rejected, but the problem escalated.
Prime Minister Zafarullah Jamali and his government seemed to have no choice. In other words, instead of rescuing the people from problems, it became important to save the order and uniform of President General Pervez Musharraf. Then Prime Minister Zafarullah Jamali, along with his party president Chaudhry Shujaat Hussain, with his political insight, piled up the MMA in the LFO issue. After a few changes in the LFO and resolving the issue of uniforms by December 31, 2004, the MMA also gave the green signal to the Jamali government on December 26, 2003 to introduce the 17th Amendment to Parliament under the LFO.
In 2003, the LFO dominated Pakistan's politics and the opposition continued to protest in parliament against President Pervez Musharraf and Zafarullah Jamali. The MMA National Assembly member was disqualified by the Election Commission and another PML-N member in the National Assembly, Javed Hashmi, was arrested on charges of sedition. In addition, on December 19, 2003, despite the opposition's insistence, Prime Minister Zafarullah Jamali decided not to take a vote of confidence.
When Prime Minister Zafarullah Khan Jamali got the government, Pakistan's foreign policy was in the swing of the United States. After the victory in the war in Afghanistan, the United States was now turning to Iraq and Pakistan was asked to cooperate. But this time, because of the democratic government, President Pervez Musharraf preferred to side with the United States in terrorism rather than Iraq, and put Prime Minister Zafarullah Jamali ahead of the Iraq issue. On January 24, 2003, President Pervez Musharraf and Prime Minister Zafarullah Jamali decided to oppose a unilateral US invasion of Iraq, and on January 26, Prime Minister Jamali said that the consensus of Muslim countries was his first wish to avert the Iraq-US war. The United States invaded Iraq in mid-March 2003. Prime Minister Zafarullah Jamali did not consider it good for the Middle East and during this war, high-ranking US officials came to Pakistan at different times and held talks with the Pakistani government. For now, the United States has succeeded in ousting Iraqi President Saddam Hussein, but the reaction of the Iraqi people has turned into a fierce opposition to the US military and pro-US forces, leading to a civil war. The atmosphere has become.
When Prime Minister Zafarullah Jamali paid his first official visit to the United States as Prime Minister on September 28, 2003, his position was that he would talk to President Bush about Indian weapons. Earlier, on September 8, 2003, when Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's visit to India came to light in connection with India-Israel relations, the Pakistani government had termed the alliance as a serious threat to the Muslim Ummah and later on September 24, 2003. Prime Minister Jamali had openly said that the world should stop giving arms to India. Therefore, on October 1, 2003, President Bush and Prime Minister Zafarullah Jamali met in Washington and the United States announced that it would maintain the balance of power in South Asia. Then on October 8, 2003, Prime Minister Zafarullah Jamali made a very interesting statement that President Bush and his views on making Pakistan a moderate country are the same. The very next day, Prime Minister Zafarullah Jamali had to say during the US-India joint military exercises that they are a matter of concern for Pakistan. That is, where are the complaints about the arms supply to India from the world and where was the US itself conducting military exercises with India and that too only a few days after the US visit. This determines Pakistan's foreign policy in a very interesting way in favor of the United States.
Prime Minister Zafarullah Jamali, during his visit to the government, gave the Kashmir issue as much importance as one would like to give to Pakistan in its favor and tried to highlight Pakistan's principled position to the world. A breakthrough in this regard was the beginning of talks between the two countries. On January 31, 2003, Khurshid Mehmood Kasuri, the Foreign Minister of the Jamali government, demanded that Pakistan, India and Israel be recognized as nuclear powers and included in the Nuclear Club. 18 months later