The Scotsman

Pakistan parliament elects opposition leader Shahbaz Sharif as premier

- By KATHY GANNON newsdeskts@scotsman.com

The Pakistani parliament has elected opposition leader Shahbaz Sharif as the new prime minister after a walkout by ousted Imran Khan's party.

Members of Mr Khan's Pakistan Justice Party resigned collective­ly just ahead of the vote yesterday. More than 100 of them walked out of the National Assembly.

The walkout followed an impassione­d speech by Mr Khan's ally, Shah Mahmood Qureshi, who defended Mr Khan, lauding what he described as his independen­ce and refusal to bow to US pressure. "We boycott this election according to the decision of our party, and we are resigning," Mr Qureshi said.

After the walkout, opposition legislator­s voted on the new prime minister with Mr Sharif as the only contender. He is the brother of disgraced former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif.

Mr Khan, a former cricket star, was ousted early on Sunday after losing a no-confidence vote in Parliament which saw him pushed out with 174 votes – two more than the required simple majority in the 342-seat National Assembly.

In as how of strength, mr khan rallied hundreds of thousands of supporters late on Sunday to protest his ousting, and describing the next government as an "imposed government ." in cities across pakistan, mr khan' s supporters marched, waving large party flags and vowing support.

Mr Khan has also demanded early elections, though the balloting is not due before August 2023. He has tapped into antiameric­an sentiment in Pakistan, accusing Washington of conspiring with his opponents to topple him. His conspiracy theory resonates with his young support base, which often sees Washington's post 9/11 war on terror as unfairly targeting Pakistan.

On April 3 Mr Khan sidesteppe­d an initial no-confidence vote demanded by the opposition by dissolving Parliament and calling early elections. The opposition, which accuses Mr Khan of economic mismanagem­ent, appealed to the Supreme Court.

After four days of deliberati­ons, the court ordered Parliament to be re-instated and the no-confidence vote went ahead. After a marathon Parliament session that started on Saturday and that also saw the resignatio­n of parliament speaker, Asad Qaiser, Mr Khan was ousted early Sunday.

Mr Khan claims the opposition colluded with Washington to topple him, allegedly because of his independen­t foreign policy favouring China and Russia. He was also criticised for a visit he made on February 24 to Moscow, where he held talks with President Vladimir Putin as Russian tanks rolled into Ukraine.

The US State Department has denied any involvemen­t in Pakistan's internal politics.

The two largest parties are the Pakistan Muslim League, headed by Mr Sharif, and the Pakistan People's Party, cochaired by the son and husband of assassinat­ed ex-prime Minister Benazir Bhutto.

Shahbaz Sharif has served three times as chief minister of Pakistan's largest Punjab province, where 60 per cent of the country's 220 million people live. His son Hamzawa selectedby the pun jab provincial parliament last week as new chief minister, ousting Mr Khan's nominee. Mr Khan's party is challengin­g that election.

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