Arab News

Former Pakistan PM ‘back with full force’ as party chief

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ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s ruling party on Tuesday reelected former Premier Nawaz Sharif as its leader, saying he was “back with full force,” a day after using its parliament­ary majority to amend a law to allow him to re-take the job.

Jafar Iqbal, who headed a five-member election body, said Sharif had been elected party president unopposed by the Pakistan Muslim League Nawaz’s (PML-N) central executive committee.

Sharif resigned as prime minister in July after the Supreme Court disqualifi­ed him for not declaring a source of income. He was also forced to step down as president of PML-N, though he kept control of the party and installed Shahid Khaqan Abbasi as prime minister.

Sharif’s re-election as party chief brings him back into the political fold, he said, contradict­ing those who thought he would no longer be relevant.

“There have been attempts again and again to exit me, but you will always keep giving me an entry again and again,” Sharif told party workers after his election. “I congratula­te that you’re bringing Nawaz Sharif back with full force.”

No one came forward to contest Sharif, Iqbal said amid clapping, thumping and slogans in support of Sharif in televised proceeding­s of the election in Islamabad. The former prime minister will lead the party for four years.

“Nawaz Sharif is the symbol of economic developmen­t in Pakistan,” Interior Minister Ahsan Iqbal said in his address to the party members.

Parliament amended a law on Monday to enable Sharif to re-take the PML-N leadership. Opposition lawmakers tore up paper copies of the Election Bill 2017, passed by the Senate last week, that allowed Sharif to become the party president again.

 ??  ?? Tombstones of Afghan child soldiers buried in Iran. (Human Rights Watch photo)
Tombstones of Afghan child soldiers buried in Iran. (Human Rights Watch photo)
 ??  ?? Former Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif addresses his supporters during a party meeting in Islamabad on Tuesday. (AP)
Former Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif addresses his supporters during a party meeting in Islamabad on Tuesday. (AP)

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