Pakistan to help Nato withdraw from Afghanistan, says Nawaz Sharif

Islamabad has shut the Khyber Pass and port of Karachi to Nato supplies
several times in the past three years amid fears it was becoming a less
reliable partner.

As a result, American diplomats have developed an alternative, northern route
through the Central Asian states of Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan.

Mr Sharif’s promise of support – although lacking detail – will go some way to
reassuring Nato countries that they can rely on the cheaper southern route.

Mr Sharif, centre, offers food to journalists after a press conference at
his farm house (AFP)

Officials said that meant ensuring security against Taliban attacks and a
commitment to being a cooperative partner.

Although final results have yet to be declared, Mr Sharif is on course for a
decisive victory in the general election, with forecasts of about 127 out of
272 seats.

With his allocation of seats reserved for women and minorities, that means he
need attract only 16 of the 30 or so independents elected to form a majority
without having to engineer the sort of fragile coalition that has hobbled
Pakistan for the past five years.

He laid out his plans for government at his family residence in Raiwind. This
has long been the headquarters of the Sharif family, who accumulated their
vast wealth from the steel industry, as well as a target for critics who
sneer at what they see as Mr Sharif’s vulgar tastes.

Bright beds of pink and violet petunias flanked the long driveway that leads
up to his whitewashed villa. More than 100 peacocks strutted the rolling
lawns on either side.

Lions adorn a hall way of Nawaz Sharif’s farm house in Raiwind (AFP)

Inside, two stuffed lions from Botswana guard the entrance hall and remind
visitors they are in the presence of the man nicknamed “the lion of Punjab”.

Plates of dates, boxes of chocolates and sugary Pakistani sweets were laid out
in the drawing room — gifts from well-wishers sent after Saturday’s
election.

Mr Sharif, who delivered his words in his usual measured way, added that
America’s covert programme of drone strikes “challenged” Pakistan’s
sovereignty.

“I think this is a very important issue and our concern must be understood
properly,” he said. “And we will sit with our American friends and we will
certainly talk to them about this issue.

Mr Sharif, 63, is returning for his third stint as prime minister. He was
deposed in 1999 when General Pervez Musharraf seized power.

He won the election by trading on his experience and a promise to fix an
almost bankrupt economy, comfortably seeing off Imran Khan’s upstart
campaign.

Although his supporters are bitterly disappointed at the result, Mr Khan,
Pakistan’s former cricket captain has won seats across the country and is in
talks to lead a coalition in the north-western province of Khyber
Pakhtunkhwa.

“If his party can take that on and show that they can actually run something,
then Imran is well placed for the next election,” said a Western diplomatic
source.

Source Article from http://telegraph.feedsportal.com/c/32726/f/568301/s/2bdacc10/l/0L0Stelegraph0O0Cnews0Cworldnews0Casia0Cpakistan0C10A0A540A560CPakistan0Eto0Ehelp0ENato0Ewithdraw0Efrom0EAfghanistan0Esays0ENawaz0ESharif0Bhtml/story01.htm

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