The Star Malaysia

Pakistan’s former president Asif wins another term

- — Reuters

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s former President Asif Ali Zardari (pic) won a second term, supported by the ruling coalition in a vote by parliament and regional assemblies, the election presiding officer said.

The role of president is largely ceremonial in Pakistan but Asif is known as a master of reconcilia­tion and could help the governing coalition partners reach a consensus to steer the broken economy on a stabilisat­ion path ahead of seeking a new IMF bailout.

As president, Asif will also be the supreme commander of the country’s armed forces, which play an oversized role in making or breaking government­s.

Presiding officer Justice Amir Farooq announced the winner in a live TV broadcast on Saturday.

Asif got 411 votes, defeating the 181 votes cast for nationalis­t leader Mehmood Khan Achakzai.

Achakzai was backed by jailed leader Imran Khan’s party.

The president is elected by votes in the lower and upper house of the parliament and four provincial legislativ­e assemblies.

Asif is the widower of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto and gained political stature after his wife’s assassinat­ion in a suicide bombing in December 2007, taking control of the Pakistan Peoples Party, in line with wishes expressed in her will.

He became president in 2008 and served until 2013, a period in which a US special forces raid inside Pakistan found and killed Osama bin Laden in 2011.

Asif’s greatest achievemen­t during his first term was seen as the building of a rare political consensus on adopting a new legal and political framework to decentrali­se power and curb the presidenti­al powers wielded by former military leaders.

From the early 1990s to 2004, he spent 11 years in jail on graft charges, which were never proven in any court and that he and his party called military-backed political victimisat­ion, a charge the army denies.

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