The Daily Telegraph

I will live simple life, says Khan as he moves into three-bedroom house

Former cricketer shuns the trappings of office as he warns of economic crisis in first speech as Pakistani PM

- By Ben Farmer in Islamabad

IMRAN KHAN has said he will forego the lavish lodgings normally used by Pakistan’s prime ministers and instead live in a three-bedroom house, with only two servants rather than the hundreds usually provided for the incumbent leader, as he prepared the country for an austerity drive.

The former cricketer used his first address after being sworn in as prime minister to rail against waste as his country faces a severe economic crisis.

He said it was shameful that the sprawling prime minister’s house had 524 staff and a fleet of 80 vehicles, 33 of them bullet proof. The cars are to be sold, with only two kept for the new prime minister. “I want to tell my people, I will live a simple life, I will save your money,” Mr Khan said.

The 65-year-old will live in the threebedro­om residence normally reserved for the military secretary.

He also used his Sunday evening address to call on the rich to start paying taxes and for Pakistanis living overseas to send their money back to domestic banks to help the country’s foreign currency crisis. In a 70-minute speech he repeated many of his populist campaign talking points, but offered little detail of how he will stave off an impending economic crisis, the prospect of which his own finance minister has said is dire.

Opposition parties also complained that he failed to mention how the country would deal with growing extremism, which Mr Khan has been accused of emboldenin­g by invoking hard-line issues such as blasphemy on the campaign trail.

Pakistan is said to need an urgent bail-out of around $12 billion (£9 billion) to stave off the debt crisis. Loans from China, Saudi Arabia or the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund are all understood to be under considerat­ion. But Mr Khan complained that the country was in a spiral of debt, borrowing to pay off the interest on earlier loans, and would lose respect by begging elsewhere for money. Instead, he called on Pakistani expatriate­s to send their money back home.

He said: “I want you to bring your money to Pakistan. To keep your money in Pakistani banks. Right now we are short on dollars. There is a huge trade gap right now.”

Mr Khan also spoke of his country’s need to tackle poverty and malnutriti­on, and promised to reduce some of the world’s highest maternal death rates and infant mortality rates. He said Pakistan was in severe danger from climate change and spoke about the need to educate the 22.8 million Pakistani children who are out of school.

Meanwhile, the new foreign minister said yesterday that he wanted talks with neighbouri­ng India and Afghanista­n. Shah Mahmood Qureshi also stressed that the civilian government would determine foreign policy, potentiall­y putting Mr Khan’s new administra­tion on a collision with the military.

Pakistan’s generals have ruled the country for much of its history and view policy on national security, India and Afghanista­n as their realm.

Mr Qureshi said that “the foreign policy of Pakistan will be formed here at the foreign office.”

 ??  ?? Imran Khan urged Pakistanis living abroad to send money back to domestic banks
Imran Khan urged Pakistanis living abroad to send money back to domestic banks

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