Little-known senator to be Pakistan caretaker PM until election
Islamabad, Pakistan – AFP:
A little-known senator from Pakistan’s least-populous province was named caretaker prime minister Saturday to see the country through to an election due in months.
Anwaar-ul-Haq Kakar, from Balochistan province, takes on a country that has been wracked by political and economic instability for months, with Imran Khan, the country’s most popular politician, in jail.
Kakar was confirmed by President Arif Alvi as the choice of the outgoing coalition government, led by Shehbaz Sharif, and opposition leader Raja Riaz Ahmad.
“We first agreed that whoever should be prime minister, he should be from a smaller province so smaller provinces’ grievances should be addressed,” Riaz said.
Kakar, 52, will lead Pakistan through to general and provincial elections due by November, but which some officials have already said will be delayed until next year.
Political analyst Hasan Askari Rizvi told AFP that Kakar “has a limited political career and not much weight in Pakistani politics”, but that could work in his favour.
“This can be an advantage because he has no strong affiliation with the major political parties,” he said.
“But the disadvantage is that being a lightweight politician he may find it difficult to cope with the problems he’s going to face without the active support of the military establishment.”
Khan in jail
The country has been in political turmoil since former international cricket star Imran Khan was dismissed as premier by a no-confidence vote in April 2022, culminating in him being jailed last weekend for three years for graft.
He has been disqualified from standing for office for five years, but is appealing against his sentence and conviction.
Authorities have cracked down hard against Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party in recent months, crushing his grassroots power by rounding up thousands of his supporters and officials.
Analyst Ayesha Siddiqa, noting Kakar had done courses at the National Defence University — formerly the military’s war college — said he would be close to the establishment.
“It seems that the establishment has struck and they have found somebody who will be watching over their interests rather than that of politicians,” she said.