Maryam Nawaz to run by-poll campaign


(MENAFN- Gulf Times) Former first lady of Pakistan Begum Kulsoom Nawaz, who left for London last week where she underwent medical tests, has been diagnosed with throat cancer.
Her younger son Hassan Nawaz confirmed her ailment.
Being in initial stages, the disease was curable, a leader of the ruling Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) yesterday quoted him as saying from London.
Kulsoom Nawaz is the PML-N's candidate in the by-election for the National Assembly seat NA- 120, Lahore-III, which fell vacant after the de-seating of her husband, former prime minister Nawaz Sharif, as a result of the July 28 Supreme Court verdict in the Panama Papers case.
The party leader said she had talked to her husband by phone and discussed with him the treatment the doctors had suggested.
Kulsoom Nawaz had played a key role in rescuing her husband and the party after the coup by then army chief Gen Pervez Musharraf in 1999.
At a time when all men of the family had been incarcerated by the Musharraf regime and the party's leaders had either gone into hiding or become inactive, she came out all alone and, as the PML-N president, led a campaign that mobilised the activists and eventually forced the government to release her family.
Before and after the period between 1999 and 2002, she opted to remain in the background and did not join active politics whether her husband was the prime minister
(1990-93, 1997-99 and 2013-17) or in the opposition.
Because of her ailment, she may not be able to run her election campaign.
The polling will be held on September 17.
In her absence, her daughter Maryam Nawaz will be overseeing the electioneering as MNA Hamza Shahbaz, who has so far been the lead strategist for the by-polls held in Punjab, also left for London.
Before his departure, Shahbaz, who is Maryam Nawaz's cousin, tried to dispel a perception that he was going abroad at this crucial time because of family differences, saying in a statement that he respected Begum Kulsoom like his mother.
He said he would monitor her election campaign through ward-level special committees from abroad.
However, his absence from the electoral bout has provided political opponents an opportunity to claim that the foundations of the ‘house of Sharifs' have begun to crumble because of differences within the family on the question of political hierarchy.


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