Sharif Pakistan’s ex-PM names brother Shahbaz as successor
Pakistan’s ousted prime minister
Nawaz Sharif named his brother Shahbaz, the chief minister of Punjab province,
as his successor and nominated ex-oil minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi as an
interim premier in a defiant speech Saturday.
The
announcement charts a way forward for Pakistan after the Supreme Court ousted
Sharif Friday following an investigation into corruption allegations against
him and his family, bringing to an unceremonious end his historic third term in
power and briefly plunging the country into political uncertainty.
“I
support Shahbaz Sharif after me but he will take time to contest elections so
for the time being I nominate Shahid Khaqan Abbasi,” Sharif said in a televised
speech to his party.
The younger Sharif holds only a provincial seat, so must be elected to the national
assembly before becoming the new prime minister.
Earlier
Saturday the Election Commission of Pakistan confirmed fresh elections would be
held in Nawaz Sharif’s former constituency.
Abbasi
is set to be rubber-stamped as placeholder in a parliamentary vote, with
Sharif’s ruling Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz commanding a majority in the
342-seat house.
The
opposition could also field a candidate for the premiership, though the nominee
has little chance of getting sufficient votes.
Nawaz
Sharif became the 15th prime minister in Pakistan’s 70-year history — roughly
half of which was under military rule — to be ousted before completing a full
term.
The
decision sent his political opposition into the streets handing out sweets and
beating drums in celebration.
But
Pakistanis were divided on whether it set the country’s democratic progress
back, with supporters, commentators and some corners of the country’s press
slamming the ruling as a “judicial coup”.
‘Honest’
The
court said in its judgement that it was disqualifying Sharif for failing to
disclose his monthly salary of 10,000 dirhams ($2,700) from a company owned by
his son in the United Arab Emirates.
Sharif
did not withdraw the salary, court documents show, but the five-member bench
ruled his failure to disclose its existence meant he was not “honest” — a
requirement for Pakistani politicians under the country’s Constitution.
Opposition
leader Imran Khan, who has spearheadead the push against Sharif, hailed the
verdict as ushering in a new dawn for Pakistan.
But
some observers slammed it as “political” and a “technicality”, with rights
campaigner and lawyer Asma Jahangir telling private Geo television late Friday
that the powerful military was using the courts to destabilise democracy.
The
military had an antagonistic relationship with Sharif, who had made several
overtures to improve relations with nuclear arch-rival India.
Sharif’s
link to the UAE company was exposed as part of an investigation into corruption
allegations against his family that erupted as a result of the Panama Papers
leak last year.
The
publication of 11.5 million secret documents from Panamanian law firm Mossack
Fonseca documenting the offshore dealings of many of the world’s rich and
powerful implicated three of Sharif’s four children — daughter Maryam and sons
Hasan and Hussein.
Claims
about the lavish lifestyles and luxury London property portfolio of the Sharif
dynasty played out for months in endless loops in the country’s raucous news
media.
Bribery
and other forms of graft are endemic in Pakistan. The PML-N has consistently
and noisily denied the accusations, insisting that the dynasty’s wealth was
acquired legally through Sharif family businesses in Pakistan and the Gulf.
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