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Sunday December 22, 2024

Who will be caretaker PM?

By Umar Cheema
April 03, 2018

ISLAMABAD: Although Prime Minister and the Leader of the Opposition will formally exchange the list of names for the caretaker prime minister next week, several names are under consideration including those likely to be acceptable to the government and the opposition. Difference of opinion, however, persists over the question whether the top office holder should be a technocrat, a retired judge or a politician.

Former Governor State Bank of Pakistan, Dr. Ishrat Hussain, has emerged as a top contender who enjoys the backing of government and opposition and also the military establishment. That he is capable enough to manage the economy during the transition period is cited as his strong qualification. How he will be able to ward off pressure from the powerful circles remains an unresolved puzzle.

His recently published book “Governing the Ungovernable” drops a few hints on how he mustered consensus within the government circle. Ishrat lavishly praised Chief Minister Shehbaz Sharif in the book declaring him a role model for the chief executives of other provinces and attributed the PML-N victory in 2013 elections to the performance of CM Punjab. Shehbaz Sharif presided over the book launching ceremony in Lahore February this year wherein he described his participation as “an honour and matter of immense pleasure.”

Ishrat’s name is not under consideration for the first time. He was a candidate for this slot in 2013 as well. The PPP, then ruling party, had proposed his name. Even now, his name is under consideration at the top level in PPP circles. Background discussion with informed officials in PML-N circles indicates he is among the hot favorites. Whether he will make it or not remains to be seen as, as a proverb goes, there are many a slip between the cup and the lip.

More so because he lost the race in 2013 at the eleventh hour. Sartaj Aziz, his decades-old friend, had assured him at a dinner in Lahore a day before the final nomination that PML-N would support him. Sartaj was the party’s secretary general then. What turned out the next day was that Mir Hazar Khan Khoso became the caretaker premier.

Sartaj himself had had the hard luck twice when the PML-N decided to elect him President of Pakistan in 1997 and 2013 but that didn’t happen. In 2013, he was called in by the Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif at PM House where his family members and kitchen cabinet were present. That he has been finalised for the presidential post was conveyed to Sartaj and sweet was distributed. Next day, Mamnoon Hussain, emerged as the dark horse.

Another candidate for caretaker prime minister is the former chief justice Tasadduq Hussain Jillani. The proposal is under circulation within the government circle amid hopes that PPP wouldn’t object to this nomination as Jillani is a close relative of former PM Yousaf Raza Gillani.

His name has come under consideration keeping in view the increasing interference of judiciary in political affairs and Chief Justice Saqib Nisar’s resolve to play role in holding fair and free elections through massive reshuffling in bureaucracy. Given his judicial background and experience of working with the present lot of the judiciary, it is thought he would be in a better position to coordinate with the sitting judges who worked under him.

That the posts of chief election commissioner and chairman NAB have already been given to the retired judges without noting any difference on coordination front is a counter-argument. Both above-named contenders, Dr Ishrat Hussain and Justice Tasadduq Jillani, denied having been contacted for consultation. Ishrat said he has been getting this question from journalists but not approached by the decision-makers. Justice Jillani said he has not been intimated either.

Then there is a third option: naming a politician for the top slot. The PPP is deliberating the name of Engineer Shaukat Ullah, a former KP Governor. His qualification is that he is from Fata. The PML-N in the meanwhile has not considered any such name, it has been learnt.

“We don’t have much hopes to attach with Asif Ali Zardari,” a senior PML-N leader said, “As he is set to endorse the name he will be asked from power-that-be like he did in the case of Sadiq Sanjrani.” Asked what would be his party’s choice in an ideal situation, he replied: “We would like Senator Raza Rabbani for the slot of prime minister and Farhatullah Babar as chief minister Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa.”