Pakistan PM confirms his administration’s term will end on August 14

Pakistan's Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif (center) addresses the National Assembly in Islamabad, Pakistan, on April 11, 2023. (@NAofPakistan/Twitter)
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Updated 12 July 2023
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Pakistan PM confirms his administration’s term will end on August 14

  • Shehbaz Sharif says the election commission will decide whether it wants to hold the polls in October or November
  • The government insisted on completing its tenure despite ex-PM Imran Khan’s campaign for early general elections

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Wednesday said the tenure of his coalition administration would come to an end on August 14, adding the election regulator would then announce whether the country would go to polls in October or November.

The Sharif-led government came into power in April last year after former prime minister Imran Khan was ousted from power in a parliamentary no-confidence vote. Khan demanded early elections in the country soon after that, though the government insisted to complete its stipulated term.

“I assure you that our government’s tenure will end on August 14, and whenever the elections will take place, either in October or November, the Election Commission of Pakistan will announce it,” Sharif said while addressing a ceremony related to educational development in Pakistan.

“I pray that whichever government comes into power gives number one priority to education as the country will not progress without it.”

The prime minister made the announcement a day after meeting Maulana Fazlur Rehman, the top leader of the ruling Pakistan Democratic Movement (PDM) alliance, wherein it was agreed to hold general elections in the country on time.

Last month, Pakistan’s upper house of parliament approved a bill seeking to amend the Elections Act, 2017, with an aim to grant autonomy to the country’s election regulatory body in setting election dates without any need to consult other state institutions.

The development followed political friction between Pakistan’s superior judiciary and parliament earlier after the top court took up a case related to election delays in the provinces of Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa where Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party dissolved provincial legislatures in January.

The Supreme Court announced the Punjab polls on May 14 and instructed the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) to make necessary arrangements for the contest, despite reservations from ECP officials on administrative and financial grounds. The court also instructed the country’s central bank to release the required funds and submit a compliance report.

As the government accused the judiciary of “trespassing” on the parliamentary domain, the ECP requested legislation that would empower it to make more autonomous decisions while conducting national elections.

Pakistan’s law minister Azam Nazir Tarar said during the debate over the bill in the Senate that the ECP had already been empowered by the 1973 constitution to announce election dates on its own.

However, an amendment made by the regime of former military ruler General Ziaul Haq changed this and transferred the authority to the president.


Hundreds of migrants, including Pakistanis, land in Greece after search operation at sea

Updated 19 December 2025
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Hundreds of migrants, including Pakistanis, land in Greece after search operation at sea

  • Rescued migrants were taken to a temporary facility on Crete after reaching the port of Agia Galini
  • Greece has made deportations of rejected asylum seekers a priority under its migration policy

ATHENS: Greece’s Coast Guard rescued about 540 migrants from a fishing boat off ​Europe’s southernmost island of Gavdos on Friday, one of the biggest groups to reach the country in recent months.

The migrants were found during a Greek search operation some 16 nautical miles (29.6 km) off Gavdos, a Coast Guard statement said. They are all well and are being taken ‌to a ‌temporary facility on the nearby ‌island ⁠of ​Crete after ‌reaching the port of Agia Galini, a Coast Guard official said, adding most of the migrants were men from Bangladesh, Egypt and Pakistan.

In a separate incident on Thursday, the EU’s border agency Frontex rescued 65 men and five women from two ⁠migrant boats in distress off Gavdos, the Greek Coast Guard ‌said.

Greece was on the front ‍line of a 2015-16 ‍migration crisis when more than a million people ‍from the Middle East and Africa landed on its shores before moving on to other European countries, mainly Germany.

Flows have ebbed since then, but both Crete ​and Gavdos — the two Mediterranean islands nearest to the African coast — have seen a steep rise ⁠in migrant boats, mainly from Libya, reaching their shores over the past year and deadly accidents remain common along that route.

Greece, Cyprus, Spain and Italy will be eligible for help in dealing with migratory pressures under a new EU mechanism when the bloc’s pact on migration and asylum enters into force in mid-2026.

The center-right government of Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis has said deportation of rejected asylum ‌seekers will be a priority.