Asia/South Asia
6 years ago

Pakistan's Imran Khan vies for power as country heads to polls

People stand in a line as they wait for a polling station to open, during general election in Rawalpindi, Pakistan on Wednesday — Reuters
People stand in a line as they wait for a polling station to open, during general election in Rawalpindi, Pakistan on Wednesday — Reuters

Published :

Updated :

Pakistanis began voting on after an election campaign overshadowed by concerns of manipulation and violence.

Nearly 106 million people are registered to vote for members of the lower house of parliament and four provincial assemblies.

The PTI party of former star cricketer Imran Khan is hoping to beat ex-leader Nawaz Sharif's PML-N.

But the Human Rights Commission says there have been "blatant" attempts to manipulate the polls, the BBC reports.

Hundreds of thousands of troops will be deployed to secure the ballot, which opened at 08:00 (03:00 GMT). Votes will be cast for 272 National Assembly seats that are directly contestable.

Pakistan is no stranger to political turmoil and the last few months have proved no exception. The man who won the last election is watching this contest from prison, after a scandal stemming from the Panama Papers led to Mr Sharif being jailed for corruption.

In an interview with BBC Urdu on Monday, the former prime minister's daughter Maryam Nawaz - who was arrested last month with her father on related charges - criticised the all-powerful military.

"When a prime minister refuses to put down his head and do their [the military's] bidding, they pull him down with four things; get a religious fatwa issued against him, call him a traitor, call him a friend of India, or call him corrupt. They use these things against every elected prime minister," she said.

In the eastern city of Lahore, the first person to enter a polling station was female business executive Maryum Arif, who told a global news agency she planned to vote for the incumbent PML-N as it had "served Pakistan."

Women in Pakistan have the right to vote though many are unable to exercise this right, with many who live in socially conservative areas pressured into not voting.

Authorities are trying to change this by saying that at least 10% of voters in each constituency must be women in order for the results to be valid.

What's the context?

Pakistan has been ruled on and off by the military during its 71-year history. This election is significant because it will mark only the second time that one civilian government has handed power to another after serving a full term.

But the run-up to the vote has been controversial.

The Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) complains of a targeted crackdown by the powerful security establishment, with the alleged help of the courts, in favour of Imran Khan and his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI).

On Sunday, a judge in the High Court of Islamabad appeared to back up that allegation, saying that the military Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) organisation had been interfering in the judiciary.

Several PML-N candidates also say they have been coerced to switch to the PTI, and nearly 17,000 party members are facing criminal cases over breaking unspecified election rules. The Pakistani military denies interfering in politics.

Independent media, meanwhile, say there have been blatant attempts to muzzle them. There are also serious concerns about the participation of internationally designated militants in the election process.

For all these reasons, the human rights commission has said there are "ample grounds" to question the legitimacy of the polls, "with alarming implications for Pakistan's transition to an effective democracy".

Share this news