Pakistan PM Sharif wins vote of confidence from parliament

After securing the confidence vote, Shehbaz Sharif expressed reservations over the rulings of the Supreme Court that had questioned parliament’s confidence in him.

Later, addressing the lower house, Sharif said that everything was in order for his country to receive a shipment of discounted Russian oil. / Photo: Reuters Archive
Reuters Archive

Later, addressing the lower house, Sharif said that everything was in order for his country to receive a shipment of discounted Russian oil. / Photo: Reuters Archive

Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has won a vote of confidence from parliament.

The resolution for the vote of confidence, moved by Foreign Minister Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, was passed by 180 members of the National Assembly, the lower house of parliament on Thursday.

"The resolution has been passed and Shehbaz Sharif has obtained the vote of confidence from the National Assembly," said Raja Pervaiz Ashraf, the speaker of the National Assembly.

After securing the vote of confidence, the premier expressed reservations on rulings of the Supreme Court that had questioned parliament’s confidence in him and warned of “serious consequences", according to Dawn.com.

The unexpected vote came days after Information Minister Marriyum Aurangzeb strongly refuted reports claiming that Sharif had decided to seek a vote of confidence from Parliament, Dawn added.

Discounted Russian oil

Later, addressing the parliament, Sharif said that everything was in order for his country to receive a shipment of discounted Russian oil.

"As we speak, the Russian oil is being loaded to arrive here," he told the parliament.

Petroleum Minister Musadik Malik told Reuters news agency last week that Pakistan had made its first purchase of cut-price Russian crude.

The discounted purchase offers much needed respite to cash-strapped Pakistan, which has been struggl ing to avert a balance of payments crisis as it awaits an IMF deal.

Foreign exchange reserves at the country's central bank have fallen to barely cover a month of controlled imports. Energy imports make up the majority of its external payments.

The deal will see Pakistan buy only crude oil, not refined fuels, with Islamabad to target imports to reach 100,000 barrels per day (bpd) if the first transaction goes through smoothly, according to Malik, who said the first cargo was likely to dock at Karachi port in May.

Pakistan Refinery Limited (PRL) will initially refin e the Russian crude in a trial run, followed by Pak-Arab Refinery Limited (PARCO) and other refineries later.

Russia hasn't yet commented on the deal, which gives Moscow a new outlet, adding to its growing sales to India and China - also often at a discount - as it redirects oil from Western markets following sanctions over its offensive in Ukraine.

Pakistan, a long-standing Western ally, imported 154,000 bpd of oil in 2022, broadly flat from the previous year, data from analytics firm Kpler showed. Most was supplied by the world's top exporter Saudi Arabia, followed by th e United Arab Emirates.

If Russian crude supplies were to reach 100,000 bpd, it would potentially mean a big drop for Middle Eastern suppliers to Pakistan.

The transaction currency, whether Chinese yuan or UAE dirham, and discount rate haven't been disclosed.

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