The Borneo Post

Pakistan PM appoints cabinet tasked with ending economic crisis

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ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif announced the key members of his cabinet, tasking them with leading the country out of a crippling economic crisis fuelled by debt, spiralling inflation and a feeble rupee.

Pakistan’s 19 new ministers took their oath of office Monday, after an election marred by allegation­s of vote rigging.

Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb – chief of a leading Pakistan bank, with a background in internatio­nal finance – was one of the only technocrat­s to be appointed among a group of Sharif loyalists.

Second-time-PM Sharif heads a fragile alliance backed by his Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz party’s long-term rivals, the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP).

Pakistan’s economy is dependent on Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) loans to service its repayments – a programme that comes with a number of conditions.

Sharif told his cabinet on Monday they would need to perform “deep surgery” on the nation’s finances, adding that: “The foremost challenge our nation confronts is inflation.”

PPP refused to assume any ministeria­l positions, instead taking only the president’s role for party leader Asif Ali Zardari, the widower of assassinat­ed former prime minister Benazir Bhutto.

The two family dynasties combined to keep lawmakers loyal to jailed ex-prime minister Imran Khan from power after they won the most seats in the February general election.

The Sharif family have ruled Pakistan for lengthy stints, with Shehbaz’s eldest brother Nawaz Sharif also serving as prime minister on three separate occasions.

PM Sharif is expected to make further appointmen­ts in the coming months.

Seventy-three-year-old Ishaq Dar, finance minister under the last Sharif government and who publicly rebuffed the IMF, was given the foreign ministry.

“It seems it is all grey-haired men who have been brought back,” Gallup Pakistan analyst Bilal Gilani told AFP.

“It’s a disappoint­ment that the government, which is facing

huge opposition from a party that talks about young people and change has – even to the extent of cabinet compositio­n

– not bothered to bring in any new faces, let alone new ideas.”

Inflation is soaring at 23 per cent, with water, electricit­y and gas price increases at 36 per cent, as the predominan­tly Muslim country marked the start of Ramadan Yesterday.

In the coming weeks, Pakistan must negotiate the latest tranche of a $3 billion loan with the IMF.

“We have to save until the last moment to shop for Ramadan, and could hardly buy anything,” said Zainab Bibi, a domestic worker in Karachi. “Let’s pray that this Ramadan passes with ease for us.”

The new interior minister, Syed Mohsin Raza Naqvi, was previously Punjab chief minister, and oversaw a major crackdown against Khan’s party.

Of the first 19 cabinet members announced, all but one were men.

Shaza Fatima Khawaja, the niece of the defence minister, was awarded the junior title of state minister.

Only 12 women were directly elected into parliament out of 266 seats in last month’s election. A further 60 seats are reserved for unelected women parliament­arians.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? In this handout photograph released by the Pakistan President House, President Zardari (standing back with tie) reads next to Sharif (sitting centre right) during the oath-taking ceremony of ministers at the President House in Islamabad.
— AFP photo In this handout photograph released by the Pakistan President House, President Zardari (standing back with tie) reads next to Sharif (sitting centre right) during the oath-taking ceremony of ministers at the President House in Islamabad.

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