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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Nawaz_SharifNawaz Sharif - Wikipedia

    He is the longest-serving prime minister of Pakistan, having served a total of more than 9 years across three tenures. Each term has ended in his ousting. Born into the upper-middle-class Sharif family in Lahore, Nawaz is the son of Muhammad Sharif, the founder of Ittefaq and Sharif groups.

    • Overview
    • Business career and entry into politics
    • Second term as prime minister
    • Third term as prime minister
    • Corruption allegations, prosecution, and exile
    • Return to Pakistan

    Nawaz Sharif (born December 25, 1949, Lahore, Pakistan) Pakistani businessman and politician who served as prime minister in 1990–93, 1997–98, and 2013–17.

    After earning an LL.B. from the University of the Punjab in Lahore, Sharif joined his family’s influential House of Ittefaq (Ittefaq Group), an industrial conglomerate with interests in sugar, steel, and textiles. Entering politics, he served as a member of a provincial council in Punjab; in 1981 he was appointed finance minister for the province, and, following elections in 1985, he rose to chief minister. As leader of the Pakistan Muslim League (since 1993 the Pakistan Muslim League–Nawaz [PML-N]), the primary party of the Islamic Democratic Alliance coalition, he was first elected Pakistan’s prime minister in October 1990. His election followed the dismissal of Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto by Pres. Ghulam Ishaq Khan, who made use of a constitutional clause that gave him the authority, as president, to dismiss the elected government if he deemed that government to be corrupt or inefficient.

    During his first term, Sharif initiated an ambitious program of economic reform, privatizing a range of state-owned businesses. Facing ongoing conflict over the Kashmir region and citing a need to secure itself against a nuclear India, Pakistan continued to defy U.S. calls for it to suspend its nuclear program; in response, the United States halted its financial assistance. Sharif also faced increasing opposition as he attempted to maintain the middle path between the Islamic right wing and the social democrats. In 1993 Sharif too was dismissed on grounds similar to those for which Bhutto had been ushered out of office. Bhutto then succeeded him, and Sharif continued to be her vocal opponent. In the 1997 elections held after Bhutto’s next dismissal, Sharif returned to serve a second term as prime minister.

    Soon after taking office for the second time, Sharif, backed by Bhutto, forced the elimination of the constitutional provision that had enabled his previous dismissal from office. Sharif also set about trimming the powers of the president and the military. His attempt to block the appointment of five additional judges to the Supreme Court late in the year, however, sparked a constitutional crisis. Chief Justice Sajjad Ali Shah, another of Sharif’s rivals, was later suspended from the court on a technicality. Rather than appoint a replacement for the chief justice, Pres. Farooq Leghari unexpectedly resigned from his post after bitterly accusing Sharif of attempting to grab sole power. The twin exits of the president and of the chief justice appeared to be another major triumph for Sharif.

    Despite a strong mandate, Sharif’s government faced severe problems. Austerity measures implemented at the behest of the International Monetary Fund reduced government spending at a time when about half the country’s money was being allocated to servicing the debt. With an economy in shambles, enormous foreign debt, widespread corruption, graft, separatist fighting, and an ongoing dispute with neighbouring India, Sharif faced a difficult task in leading the country forward.

    In the late 1990s, Pakistan’s economic situation continued to deteriorate. Sanctions imposed by the West in response to the detonation of nuclear devices by Pakistan exacerbated the crisis, and in 1998 Pakistan was nearing bankruptcy. Sharif soon found himself in conflict with a new army commander, Gen. Pervez Musharraf, and in late 1999 allegedly refused to allow Musharraf’s aircraft to land. Sharif was overthrown by Musharraf in a military coup d’état almost immediately and was subsequently tried on charges of hijacking and terrorism, for which he was sentenced to life imprisonment. In 2000, having agreed to leave Pakistan for 10 years in exchange for having his jail sentence commuted, Sharif was released from prison and went into exile in Saudi Arabia.

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    Encouraged by a 2007 Supreme Court decision which ruled that he was free to reenter the country, Sharif returned to Pakistan in September of that year, hoping to galvanize public support for the removal of Musharraf’s increasingly unpopular rule. The Musharraf government, however, bypassed the Supreme Court ruling and arranged for Sharif’s summary arrest and deportation back to Saudi Arabia within hours of his return, a move perceived by many as flouting the law. In a visit to Saudi Arabia several weeks later, Musharraf requested that the Saudi leadership cooperate in keeping his opponent abroad until the elections scheduled for early the following year had been held; in response, King Abdullah expressed a growing reluctance to maintain Saudi complicity in Sharif’s exile.

    Sharif executed a remarkable political comeback in 2013, securing a third term as prime minister when the PML-N won a resounding victory in the May legislative elections. The victory was not without controversy, though. The rival Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party, led by Imran Khan, denounced the elections as rigged and held protests in Islamabad for several months.

    At the forefront of the agenda for the incoming administration were three issues identified as “the three E’s”—economy, energy, and extremism. Under Sharif the economy improved substantially, with higher growth rates, a stable rupee, and lower inflation. Energy and extremism, though, proved more challenging. Electricity demand continued to outpace supply, resulting in frequent and widespread shortages that were often exacerbated by the overall fragility of Pakistan’s power infrastructure. Meanwhile, development of infrastructure was spurred by billions of dollars in loans from China as part of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) program that launched in 2015, although the massive lending also saddled Pakistan with an enormous debt burden to China.

    In terms of foreign policy, Sharif stepped on the toes of military leaders by pushing for improved relations with India, pledging not to meddle in Afghanistan after the 2014 withdrawal of NATO troops, and seeking a settlement with Tehreek-e Taliban Pakistan (TTP), an Islamist insurgency based in Pakistan and unaffiliated with the Taliban in Afghanistan. These positions were at odds with the military’s security interests. When opposition protests in 2014 provided a premise for the military to oust Sharif with popular support, the military instead used the opportunity to pressure Sharif to submit to the military on matters of foreign policy and defense.

    Meanwhile, the government struggled to respond to extremist attacks. After a devastating attack by the TTP on a school in Peshawar killed about 150 people in December 2014, the government instituted a 20-point National Action Plan against extremism, which included measures for regulating religious institutions and trying terrorism suspects before military tribunals instead of civilian courts. Although at the outset the plan appeared to have widespread support throughout Pakistani society, political and institutional rivalries soon reemerged, hampering implementation.

    In 2017 Sharif’s third term as prime minister came to an end when he was forced to resign as a result of a corruption probe. Suspicions of corruption—a constant accompaniment throughout Sharif’s political career—had been amplified in 2015 when a trove of international financial documents known as the Panama Papers were leaked to the press, including information linking three of Sharif’s children to shell companies that had been used to purchase real estate abroad. Sharif denied any wrongdoing, but the Supreme Court voted in July 2017 to disqualify him from holding office. He stepped down and was replaced by Shahid Khaqan Abbasi. Sharif, his wife, and his children left for London, while his brother Shehbaz Sharif was selected to lead the PML-N in the next elections.

    In July 2018 Nawaz Sharif was convicted in absentia of having owned assets beyond his income and was sentenced to 10 years in prison. His influential daughter Maryam Nawaz Sharif was convicted of having abetted a crime and was sentenced to 7 years in prison. Though they continued to deny any wrongdoing, they returned to Lahore on July 13 to serve their sentences.

    A final blow to the PML-N government came about two weeks later, when elections were held and Khan’s PTI party received the plurality of the vote. The PML-N, the PPP, and other parties expressed concern that the military had interfered in the elections; from prison, Sharif argued that the election had been stolen. The PML-N conceded victory to the PTI, however, in a bid to “strengthen democracy.”

    Sharif’s wife, Kulsoom, died of cancer on September 11. Nawaz and Maryam were granted furlough in order to attend her funeral in Lahore. They returned to prison after five days. Days later, on September 19, a court suspended their sentences, and they were released while their appeals were considered. On December 24 Nawaz Sharif was sentenced to seven years in prison and fined $25 million after being unable to prove the source of income that had allowed him to obtain one of his assets. In October 2019 he was released on medical bail and left Pakistan weeks later, although he, his daughter, his brother, and his party continued to face legal challenges in Pakistan during his absence from the country.

    In 2023, with the 2024 general elections within sight, the chances of Nawaz Sharif’s return to office appeared increasingly favourable. Khan, who had been disqualified from public office in October 2022 following allegations of corruption, was briefly detained in May 2023 after accusing a military officer of being behind an assassination attempt ag...

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  4. Oct 24, 2023 · A Pakistani court has extended protection from arrest to former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif in graft cases while another withdrew its arrest warrant against him following his return home after four years of self-imposed exile in London.

  5. Oct 21, 2023 · Nawaz Sharif, the fugitive former prime minister of Pakistan, has returned to the South Asian nation after nearly four years in self-exile, stirring up the country’s already fraught...

  6. Oct 20, 2023 · The former prime minister, who has been in self-imposed exile since 2019, flies home ahead of elections delayed to 2024. He faces court cases, a weakened party and a rival in jail, but could still be PM again with military support.

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