Pakistan names caretaker PM, paving way for elections
ISLAMABAD — The Pakistani government named a caretaker prime minister on Saturday, a move that kicks off preparations for the country’s next general elections and comes amid a year of political turmoil.
The close ties that the new leader, Anwar-ul-Haq Kakar, has to the country’s powerful military reinforces its dominance over Pakistan’s politics, sending a clear message: After a year of political turmoil that challenged the authority of military leaders, they have a firm hand on the wheel once more.
“He is undoubtedly a choice of the establishment,” Khalid Mahmood Rasool, a political analyst and newspaper columnist, said, referring to the military establishment.
The term of the outgoing government, led by Shehbaz Sharif, who is also close the military, ended Thursday. In Pakistan, oncea government’s term ends, a caretaker must be established to oversee the next general elections.
Mr. Kakar’s appointment comes amid growing speculation that elections — once expected to be held this fall — are likely to be delayed until next spring at the earliest. It also follows a dramatic week in Pakistani politics.
Last Saturday, a former prime minister, Imran Khan, was arrested and sentenced to three years in prison after being found guilty in a corruption case. The arrest was a climactic twist in the yearlong political showdown between the former leader, who was ousted in April 2022 in a vote of no confidence, and the military, which he accused of orchestrating his downfall. Military leaders deny those claims.
In the year since Khan fell out with the military and left office, he proved that he was still a force to be reckoned with in Pakistani politics. In rallies and marches across the country, he drew thousands of his supporters to the streets, where he assailed military leaders for the hard grip on power they held behind the scenes of the struggling democracy.
The military responded with a chilling crack down on his supporters that has all but hollowed out his party in recent months — a campaign that culminated with the recent imprisonment of Khan and showed that even vigorous public defiance can’t dethrone Pakistan’ s military.
With his conviction, Khan has been barred from running for office for five years, officials said. Khanis appealing his sentence in a heated legal battle that will determine his — and the country’s — political future. He is facing a slew of other court cases that he has characterized as little more than political revenge.
Mr. Kakar will be sworn in as the interim prime minister within aweek, officials said.
Typically, elections must held within 60 to 90 days of the dissolution of parliament. But there are growing doubts that the country will go to the polls by that deadline.
Officials with the outgoing government announced recently that new electoral boundaries based on the most recent census must be drawn before the country could hold its next general elections. That process is expected to take at least six months.
On Tuesday, when asked in a local television news segment if elections would be held by the end of the year, outgoing Interior Minister Rana Sanaullah said: “In a straightforward answer: No .”
Delaying the elections would benefit the military establishment, analysts say, by giving more time for the country’s heated political climate to cool before its 241 millioncitizens head to the polls.
“If the election is delayed for an extended period, it could lead to political blowback that might complicate both the political and economic dimensions,” Mr. Rasool said.