ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Imran Khan on Monday nominated former chief justice of Pakistan Gulzar Ahmed for the office of caretaker prime minister, a close aide said.
Khan lost his majority in parliament last week as his opponents built support in advance of a vote of no-confidence that had been due on Sunday.
But the deputy speaker of parliament, a member of Khan’s party, threw out the no-confidence motion that Khan was widely expected to lose, ruling that it was part of a “foreign conspiracy” and thus unconstitutional. The president then dissolved parliament on the advice of the PM.
“Prime Minister Imran Khan has nominated former Chief Justice of Pakistan Justice Gulzar Ahmed for the post of caretaker Prime Minister,” former information minister Chaudhry Fawad Hussain said on Twitter.
The nomination comes in response to President Arif Alvi writing a letter to Khan and Leader of the Opposition in the outgoing National Assembly, Shehbaz Sharif, to propose names for caretaker premier under Article 224-A (1) of the Constitution.
Justice Ahmed served as the 27th Chief Justice of Pakistan from December 2019 to February 2022.
The president has said Khan will continue to hold office until the caretaker PM’s appointment.
“Caretaker prime minister shall be appointed by the president in consultation with the prime minister and the leader of the opposition in the outgoing NA as per Article 224-A(1) of the Constitution of Pakistan,” the president’s letter said.
Alvi said in case the two leaders could not agree on the caretaker PM’s appointment within three days of the dissolution of the NA, they would forward two nominees each to a committee to be constituted by the speaker comprising eight members of the outgoing NA, or the Senate, or both, having equal representation from the treasury and the opposition.
The members of that committee from the treasury and opposition benches are to be nominated by the prime minister and the leader of the opposition, respectively, in pursuance of Article 224-A(1) of the Constitution of Pakistan.
“It is worth stating that the Constitution has empowered the president, under Article 224-A(1), to appoint caretaker prime minister in consultation with the prime minister and the leader of the opposition in the outgoing NA,” a handout issued by the President’s Secretariat said.
Opposition parties say the deputy speaker’s dismissal of the no-trust motion without a vote and the subsequent dissolution of the National Assembly are both unconstitutional. They have challenged it in the Supreme Court which is hearing the case.
In light of the hearing, Shehbaz Sharif has called the process to pick a caretaker prime minister illegal and said he would not be part of the process.
Outgoing information minister Hussain said the country was gearing up for fresh elections and dismissed the opposition’s allegations that the government’s actions were “unconstitutional.”
“Shehbaz has said he will not be a part of the process, that’s his choice,” Hussain said. “We have sent two names [to the president] today. If [Shehbaz] does not send the names within seven days, one of these will be finalized.”