Senator Qasim Roonjho Resigns from BNP-M After Constitutional Vote
Break from Party Line Leads to Upper House Exit

Islamabad-(Mudassar Iqbal): Senator Qasim Roonjho from the Balochistan National Party-Mengal (BNP-M) has formally stepped down from his Senate position.
Sources confirm that Roonjho, who broke from the BNP-M’s stance, submitted his resignation to the Senate secretary.
His resignation comes just a day after he, along with another party senator, voted in favor of constitutional amendments that have now been enacted into law, defying the official party line.
Roonjho, who also served as the BNP-M’s parliamentary leader in the Senate, along with fellow senator Naseema Ehsan, supported the 26th Constitutional Amendment, prompting BNP-M chief Akhtar Mengal to demand their resignations from the Upper House.
Earlier, acting BNP president Sajid Tareen had accused government officials of forcibly abducting Senator Roonjho, his son, and his driver. Tareen also expressed concern over the disappearance of Senator Naseema Ehsan’s husband and son, who were believed to have been taken as well.
In response to these developments, lawyers’ groups in Balochistan voiced their opposition to the constitutional amendments, alleging the establishment’s involvement in pushing through the changes, citing the “abductions” as evidence of coercion.
BNP-M leader Sardar Akhtar Mengal had recently resigned from the National Assembly in protest, leaving the party with only two senators.
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