Pakistan Election 2018: Imran Khan in strong position to form govt in Islamabad.
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ISLAMABAD: Pakistani cricket hero-turned-politician Imran Khan led in partial results of a general election on Thursday, as the party of his jailed chief rival, ousted Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, rejected the count as “blatantly” rigged.
With just 30 percent of the total vote counted, the Election Commission of Pakistan had Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) party leading in 113 of 272 contested National Assembly constituencies.
Sharif’s Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) was ahead in 66 constituencies, and the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP), led by the son of assassinated two-time prime minister Benazir Bhutto, led in 39 constituencies.
An official at the Election Commission said early on Thursday that final results had been delayed by technical failures.
“There’s no conspiracy, nor any pressure in delay of the results. The delay is being caused because the result transmission system has collapsed,” secretary Babar Yaqoob told reporters.
Khan’s camp was increasingly confident of winning the election, although it still appeared likely to fall short of the 137 seats needed for a majority in the National Assembly, raising the prospect it would need to find coalition partners among smaller parties and independents.
Khan’s party spokesman, Fawad Chaudhry, tweeted “Congratulations to the nation on a new Pakistan! Prime Minister Imran Khan”, although his party has officially held off on declaring victory.
Wednesday’s voting was marred by a suicide bombing that killed 31 people near a polling station in Quetta, capital of the southwestern province of Baluchistan.
“INTOLERABLE”
Thursday’s election results will mark only the second civilian transfer of power in Pakistan’s 71-year history.
But campaigning has been plagued for months by allegations that the unseen hands have been trying to tilt the race in Khan’s favour after falling out with the outgoing ruling party of Sharif, who was jailed on corruption charges this month.
The PML-N had sought to cast the election as a referendum on democracy, and has said it was campaigning to protect the “sanctity of the vote”.
Early on Thursday, Sharif’s brother Shehbaz, who now leads the PML-N, rejected the results after complaints that law enforcement personnel stationed in polling stations had thrown out poll monitors from political parties during the counting.
About 371,000 soldiers have been stationed at polling stations across the country, nearly five times the number deployed at the last election in 2013.
The PML-N and the PPP both said their monitors in many voting centres had not received the official notifications of the precinct’s results, but instead got hand-written tallies that they could not verify.
“It is a sheer rigging. The way the people’s mandate has blatantly been insulted, it is intolerable,” Shehbaz told a news conference as the counting continued.
“We totally reject this result,” he said. “It is a big shock to Pakistan’s democratic process.”
The PPP also complained that its polling agents were asked to leave during the vote count in a number of voting centres.
“This is the warning bell of a serious threat,” said PPP senator Sherry Rehman. “This whole election could be null and void, and we don’t want this.”
“WE WILL TAKE ACTION”
Election official Yaqoob promised that all formal complaints would be investigated.
“If there are certain polling stations where they have any complaints, we should be approached. We will take action,” Yaqoob said.
But he said he had no knowledge of widespread problems.
“We’re getting complaints that on some polling stations where certain parties are losing, their polling agents are leaving without taking the verified results,” he said.
Khan has staunchly denied allegations by PML-N that he is getting any help.
Pakistan’s new government will face a mounting and urgent in-tray, from a brewing economic crisis to worsening relations with on-off ally the United States to deepening cross-country water shortages.
An anti-corruption crusader, Khan has promised an “Islamic welfare state” and cast his populist campaign as a battle to topple a predatory political elite hindering development in the impoverished mostly-Muslim nation of 208 million people, where the illiteracy rate hovers above 40 percent.
If Khan’s lead holds, his party will likely be able to form a government with smaller parties and independents, avoiding the prospect of weeks of haggling.
Such a delay could further imperil Pakistan’s economy, with a looming currency crisis expected to force the new government to turn to the IMF for Pakistan’s second bailout since 2013. PTI has not ruled out seeking succour from China, Islamabad’s closest ally.
APP