Pakistan Cabinet sworn in; Khawaja Asif may be 1st full-time FM since 2013

New PM Shahid Khaqan Abbasi's Cabinet largely retained old faces but some new leaders were included

Press Trust of India  |  Islamabad 

New Pakistan PM Shahid Khaqan Abbasi
Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PNL-N) leader and the country's interim Prime Ministerial candidate Shahid Khaqan Abbasi | Photo: PTI

The Cabinet of Pakistan's new Prime Minister was sworn in on Friday with media reports saying that has been appointed the country's first full-time foreign minister since 2013.

administered the oath to the new members at a ceremony at the President House in Islamabad.


The new Cabinet largely retained old faces but some new leaders were included as ministers and ministers of state.

There was some confusion about the size of the Cabinet as state-run PTV reported that it included 28 ministers and 18 ministers of state, while Geo TV reported that 28 ministers and 19 ministers of state have taken oath.

There was no formal announcement so far on the portfolios.

Media reports said that portfolios of several ministers from the previous dispensation have been changed.

According to the reports, has been appointed as the country's first full-time foreign minister since 2013, when the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz party came to power.

Asif had the dual charge of the defence ministry and the water and power ministry in the previous government.

Ahsan Iqbal has been appointed the interior minister and former trade minister was given the defence portfolio.

However, the powerful former interior minister Nisar Ali Khan has been excluded from the new Cabinet as he refused to join due to differences with the party leadership, the reports said.

Ishaq Dar retained the finance ministry portfolio despite Supreme Court orders to register corruption cases against him.

Daniyal Aziz, Talal Chaudhry, Arshad Leghari and Junaid Anwar Chaudhry were among the new faces to take oath.

Two days ago, Prime Minister Abbasi had delayed the formation of the Cabinet after meeting Sharif at the ousted premier's Murree residence.

Sharif has been staying in Murree since he vacated the official residence earlier this week after the Supreme Court disqualified him in connection with the Panama Papers scandal.

The transition to the new Cabinet has taken exactly seven days since Sharif's ouster on July 28.