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Showing posts with label Nawaz Sharif. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nawaz Sharif. Show all posts

Friday, November 29, 2013

With a midnight meeting, delicate new balance emerges in Pakistan

Just after midnight in early October, Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and a coterie of his closest advisers met at his palatial Lahore home and made his toughest decision since coming to power - picking the new army chief.

The meeting took place only hours after Pakistan's all-powerful army chief General Ashfaq Kayani suddenly announced he would retire in November, scotching rumours he was seeking to extend his tenure. Sharif saw Kayani's departure as a chance to limit the sway of an institution that has ruled Pakistan for more than half its 66-year history. He immediately sat down with his top aides to choose a successor, an insider with first-hand knowledge of the event told Reuters. "We have to say 'no' to the Kayani doctrine," the insider quoted Sharif as saying at the meeting. "(Sharif) and the three others in the room all agreed that it was time to show the world that this was no longer Kayani's army."

Lieutenant-General Raheel Sharif, considered a rank outsider in the race for army chief, is due to take charge of the world's sixth-largest military in a ceremony on Friday. The decision was announced on Wednesday, and came as a shock to those familiar with the country's politics. Not only did Sharif choose to bypass Lieutenant-General Haroon Aslam, the most senior military officer after Kayani and thus his natural heir, but he also ignored Kayani's personal favourite, Lieutenant-General Rashad Mahmood. Raheel Sharif, 57, is known as a laid-back man with a fondness for cigars and an almost complete lack of political ambition. His father, a retired major, ran one of the country's most exclusive country clubs in Pakistan's cultural capital, Lahore, ensuring a connection with Nawaz Sharif, who has long been one of the most important members of the city's upper classes.

Most importantly, Raheel Sharif, who is no relation to the prime minister, has twice served under tribal affairs minister Abdul Qadir Baloch, a retired general and one of Nawaz Sharif's closest confidants. Baloch was at the Lahore meeting when Raheel Sharif's name was finalised for the top job.

COMPROMISE
Sharif knew, however, that he could not entirely overrule Kayani, the quiet, chain-smoking general, who at one point was voted by Forbes magazine as the 28th most powerful man in the world. Kayani had favoured Mahmood for the post. So Sharif chose a compromise aimed at placating Kayani loyalists. He appointed Mahmood chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee, technically the country's highest military office but historically subservient to the army chief.

Raheel Sharif will at times have to defer to Mahmood, his nominal boss, given his lack of experience in the intelligence service or the Military Operations Directorate, two traditionally powerful areas. The decision to appoint a Kayani loyalist as joint chiefs chairman is a political concession that will make or break Sharif's term as the prime minister of the coup-plagued South Asian nation, retired military officers and analysts said. It is an attempt to appease the generals while also allowing the balance of power in the country to swing toward the civilian government for the first time in more than a decade, said military affairs expert and author Ahmed Rashid. "Politicians here have a tendency to think that lesser known generals are more manageable generals," he said. "Raheel (Sharif) has not been on the radar at all. He doesn't have a public persona in the way that the other front-runners do."

For a prime minister determined to wrest control of strategic and foreign policy from the army, appointing Mahmood, a man moulded in Kayani's image, who would come to the job with his own ideas, would have been less than ideal. As one retired air marshal said: "Appointing Mahmood would have meant another three years of Kayani's thinking. It was a no-brainer."

Friday, November 1, 2013

Talks with Taliban underway: Nawaz

Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif Thursday said dialogue with Taliban has started and hoped that it will progress within the constitutional framework.

He was talking to British Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg who called on him. They discussed issues of mutual interest. The prime minister apprised Clegg on the dialogue with Taliban, relations with India, energy situation and economic reforms agenda of his government, a press release from the Pakistan’s High Commission said. Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif said the government could not wait and see the innocent people and members of law enforcement agencies being killed in the streets of Pakistan.

He said the government was making its counter-terrorism forces and intelligence agencies fully capable to root out extremism and terrorism from the country. The enhancement of the capacity of the counter-terrorism forces was a part of different options to deal with extremism and terrorism, he added. The prime minister also briefed Clegg on the recently promulgated Protection of Pakistan Ordinance and said that it was specifically prepared to deal with those terrorists who were waging a war against the people and the state of Pakistan.

On Pakistan-India relations, Prime Minister Nawaz said that he had made sincere efforts to resolve all outstanding issues with India. “We have made India-bashing a non-issue in Pakistan but unfortunately, Indian politicians are still engaged in unwarranted Pakistan-bashing,” he observed. On reduction of energy subsidy, the prime minister said some segments of society were not happy with partial withdrawal of subsidy on electricity but the direction of the present government was correct.

The premier said that during the next three to four years, new energy projects would start generating several thousand megawatts of electricity which would significantly reduce the demand-supply gap as well as prices. UK Deputy Prime Minister Clegg told Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif that he and his government were full of admiration for his pro-active approach of reaching out to India before and after elections.

He assured that the UK would fully support Pakistan’s case for GSP Plus in the EU market. Clegg also appreciated the recently introduced economic reforms agenda by the Pakistan government. The prime minister appreciated UK’s support in various sectors, especially education in Pakistan. Both the sides agreed to further solidify bilateral relations. Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif, Minister for Water and Power Khawaja Asif, Minister of State for IT and Telecom Anusha Rahman Ahmad Khan, Foreign Secretary Jalil Abbas Jilani, Fawad Hasan Fawad, Acting Secretary to the Prime Minister and Pakistan’s High Commissioner to UK Wajid Shamsul Hasan were present during the meeting.

Although Pakistan has started a process to initiate dialogue with the Taliban, but no direct talks have yet begun, officials said. Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif came to power in May after pledging to pursue peace talks with the umbrella Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) faction and won the backing of all the major political parties in September. But the TTP issued a series of stringent conditions for its participation, including the end of US drone strikes and the release of all its prisoners in Pakistani jails. A spate of bloody terror attacks in Peshawar further soured the mood for talks, but ministers have said they were still keen to press on.

Nawaz told British Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg during a meeting in London on Thursday that “dialogue with the Taliban has started”, according to a statement issued there by the Pakistani High Commission. But officials in Islamabad clarified that no direct contact has yet been made with the militants. “The formal talks are yet to take place but the process of dialogue has been started,” a senior official from the interior ministry told AFP. agencies

Saturday, October 19, 2013

John Kerry to meet Nawaz Sharif on Sunday

US Secretary of State John Kerry will hold talks with Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif here on Sunday at the start of the highest level official Pakistani visit to the United States in several years.

The two men would meet before Kerry heads on a visit to Europe, State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki told reporters on Friday.

Sharif is also due to meet President Barack Obama on Wednesday, October 23, for the highest level White House talks between the two countries since the start of the US administration in 2009, another US official said.

"It's an opportunity to broaden and deepen the relationship that we've both been working very hard towards in the last few years," the senior State Department official said.

Topping the agenda are likely to be counter-terrorism efforts, as well as Pakistan's concerns over its economy and energy supply.

Sharif was elected in May, and Washington has praised his efforts to reduce tensions in South Asia.

Relations with the United States have also improved since they plunged to one of their lowest points in 2011 amid the killing of Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden in a US commando raid in Pakistan, as well as the killing of 24 Pakistani soldiers in a US airstrike.

"There have been significant irritants which I think have reduced quite a bit over the course of the last year," the US official said.

Washington needs Pakistan's cooperation as it prepares to withdraw thousands of pieces of heavy equipment from Afghanistan ahead of the end of NATO combat operations at the end of 2014.

It is also looking to Pakistan to try to help with reconciliation efforts between the Taliban and Afghan leaders.

The United States also wants the Pakistani government to do more to crack down on militant havens. Pakistan, meanwhile, is chafing at continued US drone strikes against militants on its territory.

Drones are "part of a very comprehensive conversation we have on security across the board," the US official said.

"As we talk about all these security issues that will be a key theme, not drones necessarily, but the security situation writ large." AFP)