Deliberations on deciding the successor to Pakistan’s Foreign Secretary Aizaz Ahmad Chaudhry have gained momentum with Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif officially commencing the process to choose a suitable candidate for the diplomatic position.
"Intense jockeying for the foreign secretary's position has begun as the time for a final decision is drawing closer," Pakistan’s news website Dawn reported today.
Chaudhry has been picked as Pakistan’s Ambassador to United States as the incumbent ambassador in Washington Syed Jalil Abbas Jilani, who had earlier served as foreign secretary, is completing his tenure this month.
Sharif has four possible choices before him to pick the foreign secretary: Pakistan's High Commissioner to India Abdul Basit, former ambassador to France Ghalib Iqbal, High Commissioner to the UK Syed Ibn-i-Abbas and Permanent Representative to the United Nations in Geneva Tehmina Janjua.
He has so far not dropped any hint who his preferred choice would be. However, multiple sources told the daily Janjua was the leading choice.
Sharif has not appointed a full-time foreign minister even though over two-thirds of his tenure has passed and runs the Foreign Office through an adviser and a special assistant.
In normal practice, seniority-cum-merit would have formed the criteria for appointment of a foreign secretary. But Sharif may factor in his personal comfort with whosoever he picks and recommendations he receives about the candidates.
One consideration in the past, which has not been lately observed, has been the incoming foreign secretary should have served as an ambassador in Beijing, Washington or New Delhi.
Basit is the most-senior in the panel of four and has varied experience of bilateral and multilateral diplomacy. He was Sharif's first choice when the prime minister last picked a foreign secretary in 2013 and asked Basit in writing to return to headquarters from Berlin for the new assignment. But Sharif changed his mind and appointed Chaudhry in December 2013. Basit was sent to India as high commissioner.
Basit this time round is out of favour. Differences emerged when Basit hosted Kashmiri leaders ahead of planned Pakistan-India foreign secretaries' meeting in August 2014 leading to the cancellation of bilateral talks.
Former ambassador to France Ghalib Iqbal is another contender. A former naval officer and an engineering graduate, Iqbal entered the Foreign Service in 1983.
Iqbal's major handicap is his little experience on the territorial desks. He is currently posted as special secretary at the Foreign Office.
High Commissioner to the UK Syed Ibn-e-Abbas also joined the Foreign Service in 1983. Prior to his appointment in London, Abbas was additional secretary (administration) at the headquarters. He has remained high commissioner to New Zealand and deputy high commissioner to India.
Janjua, Permanent Representative to the UN in Geneva, is considered hot favourite. She joined the Foreign Service in 1984 and her experience has chiefly been of multilateral diplomacy. Her only remarkable bilateral posting has been as ambassador to Rome.
With PTI Inputs