Pakistan opposition seeks PM’s resignation after government ally quits coalition

Pakistan's opposition leader Shahbaz Sharif (2R) displays an agreement signed on March 30, 2022 between government coalition MQM-Pakistan and opposition party PPP ahead of a parliamentary no-confidence vote. (Aamir Qureshi / AFP)
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Updated 30 June 2022
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Pakistan opposition seeks PM’s resignation after government ally quits coalition

  • Without MQM-P, Imran Khan’s party has fallen short of 172 votes needed to retain power
  • Pakistani PM facing parliamentary no-confidence vote expected in comings days

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s joint opposition on Wednesday asked Prime Minister Imran Khan to resign after a major coalition partner formally announced the withdrawal of its support for the government, resulting in the ruling Tehreek-e-Insaf party losing its majority in the national assembly.

The Muttahida Qaumi Movement-Pakistan struck a deal with the opposition Pakistan People’s Party and signaled it would vote against Khan in a no-confidence vote expected to take place in early April.

Khan, a former cricket star, is facing his toughest political challenge since assuming office in 2018 as the opposition tabled a no-confidence motion against him in the National Assembly on Monday, amid accusations he has mismanaged the economy and governed poorly. 

The MQM-P has seven lawmakers in the National Assembly, pushing the opposition’s tally to 175 in the 342-member National Assembly, or three votes more than the number required to topple Khan’s administration.

“We are with you in this change, and hope this will help bring positive change in the lives of the people,” Dr. Khalid Maqbool Siddiqui, convener of the MQM-P, said during a joint press conference with opposition leaders.

Earlier the party’s two federal ministers resigned from their Cabinet portfolios to join the opposition ranks.

“The prime minister should set a new tradition by tendering his resignation after losing the majority,” Shehbaz Sharif, leader of the opposition in the National Assembly, said during a joint news conference with other politicians who want to oust Khan.

The opposition alliance has also nominated Sharif, president of the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz, for the coveted premiership slot after Khan’s exit.

PPP chairman, Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari, also demanded the PM’s resignation, saying he had lost the majority and confidence of the house.

“The prime minister isn’t left with any option,” he said, adding that voting on the no-confidence motion could be held even on Friday if Khan decided not to step down.

“Today, MQM Pakistan has joined the opposition ranks. Shehbaz Sharif has rightly given (Khan) a challenge in the spirit of statesmanship to resign.”

Maulana Fazlur Rehman of the Jamiat-e-Ulama-e-Islam party, another key member of the opposition, said the joint opposition aim was to “achieve prosperity and stability in the country.”

“We’ll work for it,” he added. “We want to become a nation.”


UK supported French operation to board sanctioned Russian tanker, minister says

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UK supported French operation to board sanctioned Russian tanker, minister says

  • Healey said this support included a vessel, HMS Dagger, monitoring the tanker as it passed through the Straits of Gibraltar
  • “Deterring, disrupting and degrading the Russian shadow fleet is a priority for this government“

LONDON: Britain provided tracking and monitoring support for a French operation to board a sanctioned Russian oil tanker in a bid to choke off the funds that fuel Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, UK defense minister John Healey said on Thursday.
Healey said this support included a vessel, HMS Dagger, monitoring the tanker as it passed through the Straits of Gibraltar. The ‌tanker, named ‌the GRINCH, is subject to ‌UK ⁠and European sanctions ‌for facilitating trade in sanctioned oil and forms part of a growing web of the so-called “shadow-fleet.”
“Deterring, disrupting and degrading the Russian shadow fleet is a priority for this government,” Healey said in a statement.
“I can confirm that the UK has provided tracking ⁠and monitoring in support of the French operation to board the tanker ‌Grinch.”
He said Britain and its ‍allies were stepping ‍up their response to so-called shadow-fleet vessels, which he ‍described as helping finance Russian President Vladimir Putin’s war against Ukraine.
President Emmanuel Macron said earlier on Thursday that the French Navy had boarded an oil tanker coming from Russia that was subject to international sanctions and suspected of flying a false flag.
He said ⁠the operation was conducted on the high seas in the Mediterranean with support from several allies and in strict compliance with the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea.
A judicial investigation had been opened and the vessel diverted, the French president said, adding that France was determined to enforce sanctions.
Britain’s Ministry of Defense said it routinely tracks suspected Russian shadow-fleet activity and shares information with allies, ‌adding that the country has sanctioned 544 such vessels to date.