Pakistani minister indicates growing consensus in appointing politician to lead caretaker government

Pakistan Interior Minister Rana Sanaullah during a press conference in Islamabad, Pakistan, on May 24, 2022. (AFP/File)
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Updated 27 July 2023
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Pakistani minister indicates growing consensus in appointing politician to lead caretaker government

  • Interior minister says no one wants a technocrat, retired judge or bureaucrat to head the caretaker setup
  • He challenges the perception that technocrats appointed by political parties remained neutral as caretakers

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s interior minister Rana Sanaullah said on Wednesday there was growing consensus that the next caretaker prime minister should be a politician instead of a retired judge or bureaucrat.

The country’s coalition administration will cease to exist next month since the national and provincial assemblies are scheduled to complete their five-year constitutional tenure in August.

Leading political factions in the outgoing government have started deliberating on the issue, with local media reporting recently that the ruling Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) party proposed the name of finance minister Ishaq Dar to head the coalition setup.

However, the PML-N allies expressed reservations over the name and even some of its own members objected to it publicly.

“It is not just my [political] party but everyone is saying this that only a politician should be appointed as caretaker prime minister,” Sanaullah said during an interview with Samaa TV. “It should not be a technocrat or a retired judge or bureaucrat.”

He said it was a false impression that technocrats appointed by political parties acted as neutral players while running caretaker setups.

The interior minister said the government had already empowered the upcoming caretaker administration to take important decisions for the smooth functioning of the economy and to attend to other significant governance issues.


Pakistan highlights economic reforms at Davos, eyes cooperation in AI, IT and minerals

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Pakistan highlights economic reforms at Davos, eyes cooperation in AI, IT and minerals

  • Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif speaks at breakfast event in Davos at sidelines of World Economic Forum summit
  • Pakistan, rich in gold, copper reserves, has sought cooperation with China, US, Gulf countries in its mineral sector

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif highlighted Pakistan’s recent economic reforms during the sidelines of the ongoing World Economic Forum (WEF) summit in Davos on Wednesday, saying that his country was eyeing greater cooperation in mines and minerals, information technology, cryptocurrency and artificial intelligence with other states. 

The Pakistani prime minister was speaking at the Pakistan Pavilion in Davos on the sidelines of the WEF summit at a breakfast event. Sharif arrived in Switzerland on Tuesday to attend the 56th annual meeting of the WEF, which brings together global business leaders, policymakers and politicians to speak on social, economic and political challenges. 

Pakistan has recently undertaken several economic reforms, which include removing subsidies on energy and food, privatization of loss-making state-owned enterprises and expanding its tax base. Islamabad took the measures as part of reforms it agreed with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in exchange for a financial bailout package. 

“We are now into mines and minerals business in a big way,” Sharif said at the event. “We have signed agreements with American companies and Chinese companies.”

Islamabad has sought to attract foreign investment in its critical minerals sector in recent months. In April 2025, Pakistan hosted an international minerals summit where top companies and government officials from the US, Saudi Arabia, China, Türkiye, the UK, Azerbaijan, and other nations attended.

Pakistan is rich in gold, copper and lithium reserves as well as other minerals, yet its mineral sector contributes only 3.2 percent to the countrys GDP and 0.1 percent to global exports, according to official figures.

Sharif said Pakistan has been blessed with infinite natural resources which are buried in its mountains in the northern Gilgit-Baltistan, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Azad Kashmir and southwestern Balochistan regions. 

“But we have now decided to go forward at lightning speed,” he said. “And we are also moving speedily in the field of crypto, AI, IT.”

He said the government’s fiscal and economic measures have reduced inflation from nearly 30 percent a few years ago to single-digit figures, adding that its tax-to-GDP ratio had also increased from 9 to 10.5 percent. 

The prime minister admitted Pakistan’s exports face different kinds of challenges collectively, saying the country’s social indicators needed to improve. 

“But the way forward is very clear: that Pakistan has to have an export-led growth,” he said. 

Sharif will take part in an informal meeting of world leaders this year themed ‘The Importance of Dialogue in a Divided Global Landscape,’ his office said in an earlier statement. 

Pakistan’s participation at the WEF comes as Islamabad seeks to sustain recent economic stabilization and attract investment by engaging directly with policymakers, business leaders and international institutions at the annual gathering.