Pakistan's parliament has abruptly adjourned before a planned vote on ousting Prime Minister Imran Khan, but the Speaker says the assembly will reconvene later in the day as political uncertainty continues to grip the nuclear-armed country.
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After reading details of a court ruling ordering the vote, which Khan's allies had blocked last Sunday, Speaker Asad Qaisar adjourned the session on Saturday, saying it would resume at 12.30pm (1730 AEST), but an hour after that there were no signs of parliament reconvening.
Qaisar did not give a reason for halting the session before the vote, which Khan is widely expected to lose, but said he would obey the court order.
On Friday the former cricket star turned politician vowed to "struggle" against any move to replace him, the latest twist in a crisis that has threatened political and economic stability in the South Asian nation of 220 million people.
Khan had acted unconstitutionally in blocking the no-confidence vote and dissolving parliament, the country's Supreme Court ruled on Thursday, ordering parliament to reconvene.
If the no-confidence motion passes, Khan would be removed. Opposition leader Shehbaz Sharif is the front-runner to replace him.
The prime minister, 69, who surged to power in 2018 with the military's support, recently lost his parliamentary majority when allies quit his coalition government.
Opposition parties say he has failed to revive an economy battered by COVID-19 or fulfil promises to make Pakistan a corruption-free, prosperous nation respected on the world stage.
The opposition and some analysts say Khan has fallen out with the military, a charge he and the military deny. The army has ruled the state for half its 75-year post-colonial history, and no prime minister has completed their full five-year term.
"It is very simple that whoever has a majority has a right to form a government," said Raja Pervaiz Ashraf, another opposition leader. "If Imran Khan has a majority he can form a government or else we will."
The prime minister, who enjoyed widespread popular support when he took office, said late on Friday he was disappointed with the court ruling but accepted it. He had called an election after dissolving parliament.
But he said he would not recognise any opposition government that replaced him.
"I will not accept an imported government," he told the nation in a late-night address, suggesting the move to oust him was part of a foreign conspiracy and calling for peaceful protests on Sunday. "I'm ready for a struggle."
Khan opposed the US-led intervention in Afghanistan and has developed relations with Russia since becoming prime minister. He has accused the United States of supporting a plot to oust him, without offering evidence of his claim, which Washington has dismissed.
Australian Associated Press