The house met an immediate noisy protest from the opposition lawmakers after Firdous Shamim Naqvi of PTI was denied to speak out. The provincial legislature recorded a detailed chaos with nothing left called nuisance as no business it could complete except the absurd questions and answers session.
Imtiaz Shaikh, Sindh Energy Minister, replied that the province was generating 1,300 megawatts of electricity with 40,000 acres of land available for the power projects. "Wind corridor for power generation only exists in Sindh," the minister claimed, which saw an ugly retort from opposition lawmaker of MQM, Javed Hanif, saying that "you don't know about the house," giving a wrong information to the assembly.
Shaikh immediately replied in a same bitter way to the jailed legislator, "Mind your language. It seems you have lost mind in jail". The minister also alleged the federal government for importing costly coal instead utilizing the local cheap stocks for power generation. "The federal government is importing expensive coal for power generation but is not buying cheap coal from Sindh. The federal government is doing injustice with Sindh," he added.
When the house took off its legislation session on a private members day, the assembly did find a way to see the house agenda for the day complete. The remonstration with taunting language from either side of the legislature against one another overshadowed the entire procedures.
After Firdous Shamim Naqvi was denied a chance to speak out, the opposition start off its protest as the opposition leader threatened to register his clamour at the International Parliamentary Union that dissidents are being cornered in the house.
Sindh Parliamentary Affairs Minister, Mukesh Kumar Chawla slammed Naqvi for his warning, saying that "don't boast here. Go wherever you wish". Naqvi immediately asked that "treasury should correct its attitude". The entanglement continued to haunt the house until the speaker adjourned the house for Friday, Sep 20. The opposition also complained that the concerned minister gave unsatisfactory and incomplete answers to their questions. "I protest over the minister's giving wrong and incomplete answers," Naqvi said, adding the ministers do not come prepared in the house.