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Pakistan's Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif (third left in front row) poses for a photograph with parliamentarians after current last session of National Assembly outside the parliament house building in Islamabad on August 9, 2023. Image Credit: AFP

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s parliament was dissolved by the president on Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s advice late Wednesday night, the president’s office said, setting the stage for a national election.

The advice came three days ahead of the parliament’s five-year term, which expires on August 12.

It will be followed with a caretaker administration to be picked by Sharif and an opposition leader in the outgoing parliament to hold new elections in 90 days.

“I will tonight advise the president to dissolve the parliament,” the premier had earlier told the parliament.

He said he would start discussions with the opposition leader on Thursday to pick from candidates recommended from both sides to nominate as caretaker prime minister.

The vote, however, could be delayed several months with the election commission set to start redrawing hundreds of constituencies based on a fresh census.

The last general election in July 2018 was won by the party of cricketer-turned-politician Imran Khan, who was sworn in days later as prime minister for the first time.

Khan was ousted as prime minister in a no-confidence vote last year. He has since been convicted and jailed in a graft case, following which he has been barred from taking part in any election for five years.

Khan was replaced by Sharif, who has been grappling with a debilitating economic crisis and historically high inflation levels as the government implemented painful reforms to secure funding from the International Monetary Fund (IMF).