in
Quetta After the dissolution of
One Unit in 1970, Balochistan attained the status of a full province, administered by its first governor, General Riaz Hussain, pending general elections, which were
held the same year. The left-wing
National Awami Party (NAP) secured the highest number of votes in the province, whereas the ruling party at the centre, the
Pakistan People's Party (PPP) under
Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, secured none. The NAP ministry was however dismissed by Bhutto in 1973, and its senior leaders were imprisoned. Bhutto imposed governor's rule under
Akbar Bugti, and
military operations against tribal insurgents commenced in 1973. After the Bhutto regime was overthrown in a military coup by General
Zia-ul-Haq in 1977, the NAP leaders were released and the Chief Justice of the
Balochistan High Court,
Khuda Bakhsh Marri, became governor; the other chief justices also became governors of their corresponding provinces. Marri was replaced by General Rahimuddin Khan, who announced a
general amnesty, ending military action in the province. Governor's rule returned under military ruler
Pervez Musharraf, who dissolved the provincial government in 1999, and for a brief period under the fourth PPP ministry in 2013, culminating in the dismissal of the provincial government under
Aslam Raisani amid
rising sectarian violence. ==Powers of Governor==