Imran Khan, Pakistan’s cricket hero, takes oath as country’s 22nd prime minister | World News - Hindustan Times
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Imran Khan, Pakistan’s cricket hero, takes oath as country’s 22nd prime minister

Agence France-Presse | ByAgence France-Presse
Aug 18, 2018 05:20 PM IST

Imran Khan was sworn in as Pakistan’s 22nd prime minister on Saturday morning, a day after he won the trust vote and three weeks after his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf emerged as the single largest party in the general election.

Pakistan’s new Prime Minister Imran Khan was sworn in at a ceremony in Islamabad on Saturday, officially taking over the reins of power in the nuclear-armed country after his party won a July 25 election.

A man looks at a television screen displaying cricketer-turned-politician Imran Khan being sworn in as Prime Minister of Pakistan, on August 18, 2018.(Reuters)
A man looks at a television screen displaying cricketer-turned-politician Imran Khan being sworn in as Prime Minister of Pakistan, on August 18, 2018.(Reuters)

The ceremony at the President’s House in the capital marks the end of decades of rotating leadership between the ousted Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) and the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP), punctuated by periods of army rule.

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A tearful Khan, clad in a traditional black sherwani, smiled as he stumbled over some of the words of the oath administered to him by President Mamnoon Hussain during the ceremony, televised live by the state broadcaster PTV.

He swore to “bear true faith and allegiance to Pakistan”, and to “discharge my duties and perform my functions honestly, to the best of my ability... and always in the interest of the sovereignty, integrity, solidarity, well-being and prosperity of Pakistan.”

 

Khan’s third wife, Bushra Bibi -- formerly known as Bushra Maneka -- kept her eyes cast modestly downwards during the ceremony.

It was her first public appearance since their wedding earlier this year, and she appeared escorted by tight security and covered from head to toe in a white niqab, a conservative garment by Pakistani standards.

Khan, 65, won a confidence vote in the National Assembly the day before and is expected to lead a coalition government.

The election was branded “Pakistan’s dirtiest”, with accusations throughout the campaign that the military was trying to tilt the playing field in Khan’s favour.

The army and Khan have denied claims from rival parties of “blatant” vote rigging.

The former cricketer, who captained Pakistan to World Cup victory in 1992, fell short of an outright majority, forcing him to partner with smaller parties and independents in order to form a government.

Khan had invited the rest of the 1992 team to the ceremony, and fast bowler Wasim Akram was pictured smiling among the crowd.

Another cricketer-turned-politician, India’s Navjot Singh Sidhu, was seated in the front row and earlier warmly embraced the powerful Pakistan army chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa.

First, accountability

Khan and his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party campaigned on promises to end widespread graft while building an “Islamic welfare state”.

“First of all, we will start strict accountability. I promise to my God that everyone who looted this country will be made accountable,” he said in a divisive speech in parliament after Friday’s vote.

He will face myriad challenges including militant extremism, water shortages, and a rapidly growing population negating growth in the developing country, among others.

Most pressing is a looming economic crisis, with speculation that Pakistan will have to seek a bailout from the International Monetary Fund.

With the powerful army ruling Pakistan for roughly half its 71-year history, no prime minister has ever completed a full five-year term, and Khan will also have to contend with the same issue as many predecessors: how to maintain a power balance in civil-military relations.

In the West, Khan is often seen as a celebrity whose high-profile romances were tabloid fodder, but at home he cuts a more conservative persona as a devout Muslim who believes feminism has degraded motherhood.

Known in Pakistan as “Taliban Khan” for his calls to hold talks with insurgents, he increasingly catered to religious hardliners during the campaign, spurring fears his leadership could embolden extremists.

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