ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s new President Mamnoon Hussain took office on Monday, presiding over a government battling to overcome a Taleban insurgency, resolve an energy crisis and repair the economy.
A respected businessman from the financial capital of Karachi but with no political powerbase of his own, Hussain is Pakistan’s 12th president and a ceremonial head of state.
His time in office should cement Pakistan’s transition back to a strong prime minister and parliamentary democracy after his predecessor reversed amendments made by military rulers.
Hussain was sworn in by chief justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry in a short ceremony after political leaders gathered together for cross-party talks on how to tackle growing insecurity.
Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and outgoing president Asif Ali Zardari watched as Hussain took oath, wearing a black hat in the style of Pakistan’s founding father Muhammad Ali Jinnah.
The 73-year-old Hussain was elected on July 30 by members of the four provincial assemblies and the federal parliament.
A close ally of Sharif, Hussain’s low-key persona and lack of personal power will put him in stark contrast to Zardari.
The widower of former prime minister Benazir Bhutto presided over the only civilian government in Pakistan to complete a full term in office and hand over to another at the ballot box.
Zardari’s Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) suffered a humiliating electoral defeat to the Pakistan Muslim League-N (PML-N) in May when Sharif was elected for a record third term as premier.
Hussain is a former president of the Karachi Chamber of Commerce and was briefly governor of the southern province Sindh until Sharif’s second administration was deposed by the military.
Killers pardoned
A lawyer for relatives of a Pakistani student whose death sparked outrage against the abuse of power by the wealthy says his family has decided to pardon the men convicted in his killing.
Lawyer Mehmood Alam Rizvi said Monday that the family filed an affidavit with the court several days ago pardoning the men accused of killing their son, Shahzeb Khan.
The suspects come from two of the wealthiest families in Karachi.
They were convicted in June of killing the 20-year-old student after he argued with one of their servants.
The killing led to an unusual social media campaign demanding the country’s rich and powerful be held accountable for their acts.
The court must now decide whether to accept the pardon, but judges generally follow the decision of the family.
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