Business Day

Jailed Khan plans new Pakistani government

- David Brunnstrom, Charlotte Greenfield and Krishn Kaushik

Pakistans ’ jailed former prime minister Imran Khan has said that independen­t MPs backed by his party will join the minority Majlis-e-Wahdat-e-Muslimeen (MWM) party to form a government after inconclusi­ve elections last week, an official of Khan’s party quoted him as saying on Tuesday.

He also said that Khan will decide who the prime minister of this government will be.

Pakistan’s election has been remarkable in producing a result disappoint­ing to most of its foreign partners and rivals, with little reason for optimism about the government that will eventually emerge from it, foreign policy analysts said.

Pakistan’s two largest political parties have been wrangling over who will be prime minister after an inconclusi­ve vote last week forced them to join forces and try to form a coalition in a parliament dominated by independen­ts.

Neither former prime minister Nawaz Sharif’s Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PMLN), nor the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) of Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, son of assassinat­ed former premier Benazir Bhutto, won enough seats to form a government alone.

Independen­t candidates backed by Khan represent the largest group, with 93 of the 264 parliament­ary seats declared. That shocked many, who had expected their showing to be severely dampened by an intense crackdown on Khan and his party.

But Khan cannot become prime minister as he is in jail and his grouping cannot form a government as they nominally ran as independen­ts as his party was barred from standing.

Some foreign policy analysts said the election results probably indicate voters’ protest against perception­s of the country’s powerful military’s involvemen­t in politics. But the military denies it interferes in the country’s politics.

That adds to the political instabilit­y given the military’s strong historic role in the security and foreign affairs of the nuclear-armed nation.

“Pakistan has been on a slippery slope for some time but a mild one. The slope is now much stiffer,” said Frederic Grare, a South Asia expert at the Australian National University’s National Security College.

“The military will most likely be able to manage the situation for some time but … the political situation is likely to be less and less stable.”

It’s a messy scenario no-one wanted — not China, Pakistan’s main foreign backer, not India, Pakistan’s nuclear-armed neighbour and bitter rival, nor the US, which has a reduced stake in Pakistan after quitting Afghanista­n in 2021, but remains concerned about Islamist militancy as a broader source of instabilit­y in the region, analysts said.

The prospect of a weak, divided government also raises questions about whether Pakistan will be able to undertake reforms needed to secure a vital new IMF programme later this year.

TAKE COMFORT

Last week, the US, Britain and the EU separately expressed concerns about Pakistan’s electoral process and urged a probe into reported irregulari­ties. Pakistan’s caretaker prime minister rejected those allegation­s.

Possibly the only countries taking any comfort from the outcome will be some in the Middle East.

“Imran Khan did not have a great relationsh­ip with many of Pakistan’s traditiona­l Gulf partners,” said Joshua White, a former White House adviser now at Johns Hopkins University’s School of Advanced Internatio­nal Studies.

“I think the Saudis and the Emiratis are likely to be relatively comforted by the that he is locked away and that his party probably … will not form government in Pakistan.”

Tamanna Salikuddin, South Asia director at Washington’s US Institute of Peace think-tank, said that rather than resolving the political crisis Pakistan has been plagued with since Khan was ousted in 2022, the election “has created more confusion and uncertaint­y”.

“This election not only reveals the lack of trust that Pakistanis have in their leaders, but also it is evidence that no institutio­n or leader has a plan to fix the economy, nor do they have the political capital to make any of the very difficult and painful reforms to turn around this failing economy,” she said.

DEBT

“Much of Pakistan ’ s debt is owed to the Chinese, and they will also be concerned about Pakistan’s lack of economic reforms.” China’s multibilli­ondollar China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) is a key part of Chinese President Xi Jinping’s signature Belt and Road infrastruc­ture initiative.

The CPEC has slowed in recent years and a strong mandate by any future Pakistani government would be needed to cut through red tape and get it on track.

Elizabeth Threlkeld, a former US diplomat in Pakistan now with the Stimson Center thinktank, said negotiatin­g a new IMF deal was the first priority for a new government.

“Any prolonged political uncertaint­y would complicate that process at a time when Pakistan can ill-afford delays,” she said.

Former Indian diplomats said the muddled poll result created difficulti­es for India’s relationsh­ip with its nucleararm­ed rival and Delhi was likely to take a “wait-and-watch” approach.

Sharat Sabharwal, India ’ s high commission­er to Pakistan from 2009-13, said it would also be difficult for a new Pakistani government to move forward in relations with India.

“It needs political consensus to be able to move forward on that. And that consensus will not be there … if you do something on India, your opponents are going to immediatel­y accuse you of a sell-off.”

Popular Khan has also publicly accused the US of being part of a conspiracy to topple his government.

Washington has denied being involved in any such conspiracy and Khan has been convicted over allegation­s of leaking diplomatic correspond­ence between Islamabad and Washington, which he denies.

“After two years of turmoil, the internatio­nal community simply wants a functionin­g government with some legitimacy in Pakistan,” said Husain Haqqani, Pakistan’s former ambassador to Washington and a senior fellow at the Hudson Center. “They want to be able to deal with Pakistan without fear of normal diplomatic interactio­n being turned into a conspiracy theory.”

THE US, BRITAIN AND THE EU SEPARATELY EXPRESSED CONCERNS ABOUT PAKISTAN’S ELECTORAL PROCESS

 ?? /Reuters ?? Not enough seats: Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, chair of the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP), addresses a press conference in Islamabad, Pakistan, on Tuesday.
/Reuters Not enough seats: Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, chair of the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP), addresses a press conference in Islamabad, Pakistan, on Tuesday.

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