Pakistan's ex-judge sworn in as interim prime minister

Pakistan’s former Chief Justice Nasir-ul-Mulk. (Photo courtesy: Govt of Pakistan/Twitter)
Updated 01 June 2018
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Pakistan's ex-judge sworn in as interim prime minister

  • Nasir-ul-Mulk sworn in as the caretaker prime minister for a period of two months before noon Friday
  • Incumbent Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi resigned midnight Thursday, ending his turbulent tenure since July 2017

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s former Chief Justice Nasir-ul-Mulk sworn in as the caretaker prime minister for a period of two months before noon Friday, hours after the president dissolved the powerful lower house of parliament.

 

The constitution mandates new elections to be held within 60 days.
Mulk, who has a reputation as a defender of democratic institutions, will run the interim government pending results of July 25 vote.
Incumbent Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi resigned midnight Thursday, ending his turbulent tenure since July 2017 when he replaced Nawaz Sharif following his removal from office by the Supreme Court for concealing financial assets abroad.
Sharif now faces trial over corruption.
Mulk was selected by the ruling Pakistan Muslim League party and the opposition on Monday.
The electoral process will begin on Sunday with the filing of nomination papers for the seats at the National Assembly and provincial assemblies. Candidates have until June 6 to register. The winning party will name the next prime minister.
Abbasi, in his last speech to lawmakers Thursday, said that his Pakistan Muslim League party will oppose any delay in the elections.
Sharif, too, has asked people to vote for the league so that the new parliament with help from legislation could reverse the decision of the judges that disqualified him. He has openly criticized the judges, saying they removed him from power on a trivial charge.
Abbasi has defended Sharif, saying he was serving the nation when the judiciary threw him out. It was unclear why Sharif’s party proposed Mulk to run the interim government despite having uneasy relations with the judges.
Mulk served as Pakistan’s chief justice from 2014 to 2015.
Almost all of Pakistan’s political parties welcomed Mulk’s nomination, including Imran Khan, the country’s popular opposition leader and former cricket star who aspires to become prime minister at the July elections.
Khan has been leading rallies and fighting legal battles against the Pakistan Muslim League since 2013.

FASTFACTS

It is only the third time in Pakistan’s history that the National Assembly finished its five-year term.


Hungry, wounded, orphaned: South Sudan’s children trapped in new conflict

Updated 6 sec ago
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Hungry, wounded, orphaned: South Sudan’s children trapped in new conflict

  • The hospital in Akobo has only one surgeon, now overwhelmed
  • More than 40 young men were being treated for gunshot wounds during AFP’s visit

AKOBO, South Sudan: An 18-month-old boy lies motionless on a dirty hospital bed deep in the conflict zone of South Sudan, a bullet wound in his leg — another newly orphaned victim in the world’s newest country.
“When they arrived, they started shooting everyone in the area — elder, child, and mother,” Nyayual, his grandmother, told AFP at the hospital in the opposition-held town of Akobo, eastern Jonglei State.
The bullet that hit the little boy also killed his mother — Nyayual’s daughter. AFP is using only her first name for fear of reprisals.
She says it was government forces that attacked their village.
“We ran away... they were still shooting at us,” she said. “This failed government has no way to resolve things.”
South Sudan gained independence in 2011 but soon descended into civil war between two rival generals, Salva Kiir and Riek Machar.
A 2018 power-sharing deal brought relative peace, with Kiir as president and Machar his deputy, but the agreement has unraveled over the past year.
Fighting in Jonglei state between the army under Kiir and forces loyal to Machar has displaced some 280,000 people since December, according to the United Nations.
The hospital in Akobo — a ramshackle collection of buildings, most without doors or windows — has only one surgeon, now overwhelmed. More than 40 young men were being treated for gunshot wounds during AFP’s visit.
In one ward, an elderly woman lay, her face turned away from the family around her. She was shot by soldiers in both legs, they said. They carried her for days before finding a car that agreed to bring them to the hospital.
The military declined to comment to AFP on the claims. The Jonglei state government’s information minister, Nyamar Lony Thichot Ngundeng, said she did not have information about the incidents.
However, she added: “If you get injured during the crossfire, that is counted as a crossfire, it is not intentional.”

- ‘Disaster’ -

UNICEF says more than half the displaced are children, some fleeing for the second or third time. Around 825,000 are at risk of acute malnutrition across three of South Sudan’s states: Jonglei, Unity and Eastern Equatoria.
Akeer Amou, 33, fled Jonglei for an informal camp on the banks of the White Nile, where she gave birth to her fifth child.
Not on any maps, the place is known only as Yolakot, meaning riverside, but hundreds of women and children now live under the shade of its trees, waiting for help. AFP saw at least three other newborns among them.
Amou named her child Riak, meaning “disaster.”
She does not know why the conflict is happening, but she knows her son will bear the brunt.
“Breast milk can come if there is something to eat, but now there is nothing,” she said, gently rocking Riak under the scant protection of a cotton sheet.
The mothers spend the days foraging for fruit, nuts, and water lily seeds, while children splash in the river’s murky waters.
Most are desperately hungry. A local official told AFP there were roughly 6,700 people waiting for food, but there was no sign of any aid.

- Out of supplies -

In Jonglei’s state capital Bor, doctors try to serve the massive influx of displaced people with rapidly dwindling supplies.
David Tor, acting director of the town’s hospital, introduced AFP to a mother who had been forced to deliver in nearby swamp land. He had managed to reduce the newborn’s fever, a rare bit of good news.
The mother fled Fangak, a town to the north, where last May the only health care facility for more than 100,000 people — run by international NGO Doctors Without Borders (MSF) — was attacked by helicopter gunships and drones, which completely destroyed its pharmacy and all its medical supplies.
“Because of the increase in the number of people who need services, we have run out of almost everything,” said Tor. “At a certain point we may lose patients.”
Jonglei information minister Ngundeng told AFP the hospital would receive supplies.
“I would say it’s enough until the hospital or the ministry of health says otherwise,” she said.

- Trapped -

South Sudan is ranked the most corrupt country in the world by monitoring group Transparency International.
Billions in oil revenue have been stolen by the elite, according to the UN, and the country relies on international donors for 80-90 percent of its health care needs.
Fresh conflict is creating another generation of children with few prospects for a better life. The World Bank estimates 70 percent are not in school.
In the displacement camp in Lake State, south of Bor, where some 35,000 people have recently arrived, mothers queued to sign up their children for an emergency education and psycho-social program run by the Norwegian Refugee Council. It has already registered 2,000 children.
Some of those in the queue may never escape this life.
Nyanhiar Malneth, 28, grew up in an earlier conflict in the country. Her schooling ended when she was eight and she has spent years in displacement camps with her five children.
“I want them to go to school for knowledge,” she said.
But first there are more urgent concerns: “We need something to eat.”