Pakistan's PM Sharif undergoes successful open-heart surgery in London

Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif speaks during a joint news conference in Kabul, Afghanistan, on May 12, 2015. PHOTO: REUTERS

ISLAMABAD (Reuters) - Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif underwent successful open heart surgery in a London hospital on Tuesday (May 31), his second cardiac procedure in five years, his daughter said.

Mr Sharif's surgery comes as his government prepares to present its annual Budget on Friday. It also remains under pressure over allegations of corruption linked to the so-called Panama Papers.

"Surgery successful," his daughter Maryam said on her Twitter account about four and a half hours after she said the operation had begun.

Mr Sharif "was in high spirits" when he went in to the operating theatre at about 8am, Maryam said earlier on her Twitter account.

The operation was for a "perforation of the heart", a complication from a 2011 procedure, Maryam said in a Twitter post last week.

Mr Sharif, 66, was prime minister for two terms in the 1990s before being overthrown in a 1999 military coup.

After years in exile, he returned to Pakistan in 2007 and led his party to a victory in a 2013 election.

Mr Sharif has been accompanied to London by his brother Shahbaz Sharif, who is chief minister of Punjab province, and several other family members and aides.

He has travelled to London for medical treatment several times over the past year.

On Monday, Mr Sharif telephoned his Indian counterpart Narendra Modi, thanking him for his wishes for a quick recovery, the Pakistani Foreign Office said in a statement.

Mr Sharif made a bid to improve ties with old rival India a main policy in his 2013 election campaign, though progress has been slow.

Mr Sharif has been overseeing state affairs in the days leading up to the surgery, and on Monday addressed an economic meeting, signing off on budget proposals that include a target of 5.7 per cent growth in the year beginning in July.

Pakistan missed its gross domestic product growth target of 5.5 percent for the year ending in June, hitting only 4.7 per cent.

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