Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Space Industry and Business News .




THE STANS
Sharif reaches out to US, India after Pakistan win
by Staff Writers
Raiwind, Pakistan (AFP) May 13, 2013


Pakistan's incoming prime minister Nawaz Sharif on Monday reached out to India and the United States, pledging to strengthen relations after his thumping victory in landmark elections.

Sharif promised Pakistan's "full support" as the United States withdraws combat troops from Afghanistan next year and made overtures to nuclear rival India in a briefing with the foreign media at his family estate outside Lahore.

In an astonishing comeback 14 years after he was ousted by a military coup and briefly jailed, his centre-right Pakistan Muslim League-N (PML-N) is projected to win 130 of the 272 directly elected seats in the national assembly.

"If there are concerns on either side I think we should address those concerns and strengthen this relationship," Sharif told journalists, referring to Pakistan's alliance with the United States which can be notoriously difficult.

The US and NATO are due to withdraw most of their troops from the war against the Afghan Taliban by the end of 2014 and Pakistan will be a key transit point for shipping home equipment overland to the port at Karachi.

"We will extend full support to them and we will see everything goes smoothly," Sharif said, hours after President Barack Obama said Washington was ready to work with Islamabad "as equal partners" and welcomed the transition.

One thorn in the relationship is US drone strikes targeting Taliban and Al-Qaeda militants in the northwestern tribal belt, which are unpopular in Pakistan due to civilian casualties and seen as an infringement of sovereignty.

"This is a very important issue and our concern must be understood properly. We will sit with our American friends and we will certainly talk to them on this issue," Sharif said.

He added that he would be "very happy" to invite India's Manmohan Singh to his swearing-in ceremony and hoped that he would visit soon. The Indian leader on Sunday congratulated him and expressed hope for better relations.

But Sharif's biggest challenges are likely to be closer to home -- fixing the shattered economy, ending an appalling energy crisis and tackling Islamist militancy.

Sharif will likely need only the estimated 27 independents and his proportion of those seats reserved for women and minorities, to secure a majority in the first democratic transition in a country accustomed to long periods of military rule.

The outgoing Pakistan People's Party suffered a crushing defeat, collapsing from 88 directly elected seats to 33, according to newspaper projections, but enough to emerge as the second largest party and likely to go into opposition.

Its chairman Makhdoom Amin Famin said Sunday: "We have our reservations on the transparency of the elections but for the sake of political stability in the country we accept the results."

Cricket star Imran Khan, who promised a "tsunami" propelling him into power, appeared to have slipped into third place on 29 seats -- still an astonishing achievement for a party which previously won only one seat in 2002.

His Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) will try to form a provincial government in the Taliban-hit northwest, but go into opposition at the national level.

PTI supporters carried out protests in Islamabad, Lahore and Karachi on Sunday over alleged rigging in a handful of seats.

Ishaq Dar, who served in Sharif's second administration and again briefly in 2008, will again return as finance minister, a PML-N spokesman said.

In Karachi the benchmark index of top 100 shares rose 1.6 percent to 20,250.42 points in afternoon trade, surpassing the 20,000 mark for the first time as the election results defied analysts' predictions of a weak parliament.

Investors are hopeful of an economic revival under Sharif, whose privatisation policies earned him a good reputation among traders and industrialists during his two previous tenures in the 1990s.

High turnout, estimated at around 60 percent by the election commission, in Saturday's polls was a positive step for democracy even though the campaign was marred by violence and irregularities, an EU observer mission said.

Violence in the run-up to polls and on election day itself killed over 150 people, according to an AFP tally, as the Taliban declared the polls unIslamic.

After the election commission finalises the results later Monday, the president will have to summon the new parliament within three weeks.

.


Related Links
News From Across The Stans






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








THE STANS
Pakistan ex-envoy doubts Sharif on extremists
Washington (AFP) May 13, 2013
Pakistan's former ambassador to Washington on Monday cast doubt on incoming prime minister Nawaz Sharif's overtures to the United States and India, saying he has a poor record on opposing extremists. Husain Haqqani, who is close to the rival Pakistan People's Party, said that Sharif may not back up his statements with substance after the two-time prime minister's center-right Pakistan Muslim ... read more


THE STANS
Heady mathematics

Cornstarch proves to be worth its weight in gold

One order of steel; hold the greenhouse gases

Cloud computing is silver lining for Russian firms

THE STANS
Department of Defense looking to allow Apple, Samsung devices

DARPA Seeks Clean-Slate Ideas For Mobile Ad Hoc Networks

Astrium's secure milsatcoms now cover the world

Gilat to Equip IDF with SatTrooper-1000 Military Manpack

THE STANS
NASA Awards Contract to Modify Mobile Launcher

Angara Rocket Launch Delayed to 2014

ESA's Vega launcher scores new success with Proba-V

European Vega rocket launch delayed due to weather

THE STANS
Facebook eyes $1bn deal for GPS app Waze

Orbcomm Signs Seven New Customers In Transportation And Logistics Industry

Turn your satnav idea into business

NIST demonstrates transfer of ultraprecise time signals over a wireless optical channel

THE STANS
EADS posts profit leap as Airbus orders soar

EADS says Pentagon ending helicopter program

Boeing Brings B-52 into Digital Age with Significant Communications Upgrade

Flyers don't turn off phones in planes: survey

THE STANS
New magnetic graphene may revolutionize electronics

Flawed Diamonds Promise Sensory Perfection

Scientists develop device for portable, ultra-precise clocks and quantum sensors

Quantum optics with microwaves

THE STANS
ESA's next Earth Explorer satellite Will Map The Tropics

Landsat Thermal Sensor Lights Up from Volcano's Heat

Scaling up gyroscopes: From navigation to measuring the Earth's rotation

NASA Opens New Era in Measuring Western US Snowpack

THE STANS
PCBs are everywhere

Nations agree to phase out toxic chemical HBCD

Toxic waste sites cause healthy years of life lost

Progress in introducing cleaner cook stoves for billions of people worldwide




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement