The Welland Tribune

Lawmaker Shahid Abbasi elected as Pakistan’s PM

-

MUNIR AHMED and ZARAR KHAN

ISLAMABAD — Pakistan’s lower house of parliament on Tuesday elected veteran lawmaker Shahid Khaqan Abbasi as the country’s new prime minister, a loyalist of outgoing Nawaz Sharif, who was disqualifi­ed by the Supreme Court for concealing assets.

Abbasi, a member of the ruling Pakistan Muslim League party, got 221 votes in the 342-member National Assembly. His closest rival Syed Naveed Qamar from the opposition Pakistan People’s Party secured 47 votes, according to Ayaz Sadiq, the National Assembly Speaker. Sheikh Rasheed Ahmed, a lawmaker from the Pakistan Tehreek-eInsaf party, founded by cricketert­urned-politician Imran Khan, got 33 votes.

Hours later, Abbasi was sworn in to his office at the presidency palace in the capital, Islamabad. President Mamnoon Hussain administer­ed the oath of office to him at a ceremony which was attended by leaders from the ruling party, diplomats, bureaucrat­s and senior military official.

Abbasi replaced the 67-yearold Sharif, who was disqualifi­ed by the top court Friday for concealing assets — specifical­ly, that his son’s Dubai-based company listed a monthly salary for him. Sharif claimed he never received any of that money.

Sharif’s party wants Abbasi to serve as an interim premier for 45 days or until Sharif’s younger brother, Shahbaz Sharif, the chief minister of Punjab province, wins a national assembly seat in a byelection.

The opposition has criticized this intention as dynastic and undemocrat­ic, criticism that Abbasi rejects.

“I may be here for 45 hours or 45 days. I am the prime minister and I am not here to keep the seat warm, I will do the work of 45 months in 45 days, if I remain here,” he said in his speech.

Abbasi also dismissed the corruption allegation­s against Sharif as baseless and said he hoped the deposed premier would return to parliament soon. He said the people of Pakistan did not accept Sharif’s disqualifi­cation, and vowed to follow in the footsteps of Sharif.

Abbasi was jailed by the former military dictator Pervez Musharraf for not testifying against Sharif following a 1999 bloodless coup in which Sharif’s elected government was overthrown. Sharif and his family were subsequent­ly exiled to Saudi Arabia.

On Tuesday, Abbasi said he would ensure rule of law in Pakistan. He stopped short of criticizin­g the judiciary, saying legal experts were surprised by the decision to disqualify Sharif and that no one was willing to accept it. He said Sharif was victimized for putting Pakistan back on the path of progress and bringing in foreign investment­s worth billions of dollars to Pakistan.

He also said Sharif was able to attract foreign investment because he was an honest person.

Abbasi also asked his countrymen to pay their taxes honestly as he plans to take stern action against anyone involved in tax evasion. He said rich people must pay their taxes for Pakistan’s economy to improve. He promised better health and education facilities for his countrymen.

Abbasi said he would ensure the rule of law and that he would run the country strictly according to the constituti­on.

Sharif ’s party has said it will file a petition with the Supreme Court next week asking for a review of its decision to disqualify him.

Abbasi’s rival candidates Qamar and Ahmed congratula­ted him on becoming the new prime minister and hoped that he would ensure political stability in Pakistan, which has faced political turmoil and militancy since Sharif came into power after in 2013.

 ?? AAMIR QURESHI/GETTY IMAGES ?? Pakistan’s former Petroleum Minister and Prime Minister-Designate Shahid Khaqan Abbasi arrives at the Parliament House to casts his vote during the election for interim prime minister in Islamabad on Tuesday.
AAMIR QURESHI/GETTY IMAGES Pakistan’s former Petroleum Minister and Prime Minister-Designate Shahid Khaqan Abbasi arrives at the Parliament House to casts his vote during the election for interim prime minister in Islamabad on Tuesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada