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Pakistan caretaker PM: Military justifiably strong

The caretaker prime minister says he’s ‘not being apologetic’ about being called the military’s man

Pakistan’s caretaker prime minister said he is ‘not being apologetic’ and ‘not trying to create the impression otherwise’ about being perceived as the military’s choice to run the country.

In an exclusive interview with the Â鶹ԼÅÄ’s HARDtalk programme, Anwaar-ul-Haq Kakar acknowledged that ‘people do view me as someone who’s quite close to the military establishment’. Speaking with Zeinab Badawi on a visit to London, the caretaker prime minister, who was appointed in August to oversee upcoming national elections, said this perception was due to his ‘analysis’ of the ‘reasons for this imbalance in the civil-military relationship’.

The military has heavily influenced Pakistan for most of its existence and is a crucial behind-the-scenes player in the country's politics. Mr Kakar said this is because civil institutions ‘fail and they have deteriorated their capacity in the last four or five decades’, whereas the military ‘has gained strength. So whenever a challenge occurs on account of the governance, the government has to rely on that military’.

Asked whether in essence he was saying that the military’s strength was justifiable because civilians aren’t capable of delivering, Mr Kakar responded: ‘pragmatically of course, yes’.

In Pakistan a neutral caretaker government oversees the national elections. Usually those elections should be held within 90 days, but the next elections are scheduled for the end of January, five months after Mr Kakar’s August appointment.

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3 minutes