Pakistani President Mamnoon Hussain called a special parliamentary session for tomorrow to hold a vote to install Shahid Khaqan Abbasi as interim prime minister, with the ruling party vowing a smooth transfer of power after Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif was ousted.
Hussain announced his decision late on Saturday after Sharif put forward his staunch ally Abbasi as interim leader and his brother, Shahbaz, as long-term successor.
Nawaz Sharif’s Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) party has a strong majority in parliament and should have no problem installing Abbasi as leader.
The quick handover could ease political upheaval sparked by the Supreme Court’s decision on Friday to disqualify Nawaz Sharif for not declaring a source of income. The court also ordered a criminal investigation into him and his family.
The turmoil and the premature end to his third stint in power has also raised questions about the nation’s democracy, as no prime minister has completed a full term in power since independence from British colonial rule in 1947.
Sharif has lashed out against the court’s decision and opponents who used the Supreme Court to topple him, but vowed his party would continue to focus on economic development, touting a faster-growing economy as proof of his success.
“Wheel of development is moving and may God keep it rolling and may it never stop,” he told PML-N members on Saturday night.
His foes slammed PML-N’s plans as dynastic and undemocratic, while opposition leader Imran Khan called it a form of monarchy.
Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party, which held street protests until the Supreme Court agreed to investigate Sharif, planned to hold a rally in Islamabad yesterday to celebrate his removal.
Sharif said the plan is for former Pakistani minister of petroleum Abbasi to stay in power for less than two months until Shahbaz, who is the chief minister of the vast Punjab Province, wins a by-election to the national assembly and becomes eligible to be prime minister.
“We wanted to make sure there is a smooth transfer of power and no constitutional crisis,” senior PML-N official and Sharif ally Miftah Ismail said.
Abbasi and Shahbaz will have to hit the ground running to tackle Pakistan’s worsening ties with the US, frayed relations with India and persistent attacks by Islamic militants.
They will also need to boost economic growth above the current rate of 5.3 percent to find employment for millions of young people entering the job market every year in a nation of nearly 200 million people.
Economists say this will prove tricky at a time when the account deficit is ballooning and an overvalued currency is hurting exports.
The army has not commented on Sharif’s departure, or on allegations they were involved. It has also dismissed claims in the past that they were behind the Supreme Court’s push.
Sharif’s two previous stints in power were also cut short, the second ending in a military coup led by General Pervez Musharraf in 1999.
Shahbaz Sharif, who has been in charge of Punjab since 2008, has better relations with the military than his brother. He has built a reputation as a competent administrator focused on building infrastructure.
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