Pakistan’s General Election 2018: Comparative analysis of manifestos

Pakistani commuters ride past an auto-rickshaw decorated with election candidate posters on a street in Rawalpindi on July 23, 2018 ahead of general election. (AAMIR QURESHI/AFP)
Updated 24 July 2018
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Pakistan’s General Election 2018: Comparative analysis of manifestos

ISLAMABAD: All over the world, in order to make informed electoral choices, citizens rely on understanding key policy pledges contained in party manifestos. Party manifestos are not unveiled just ahead of an election but are live documents that are continually shaped and refined.
This is not the case in Pakistan, which is to undergo its 11th general election on Wednesday (July 25). Even though the pre-election environment has kicked in a while ago and opinion polls have largely depicted citizens’ voting preferences, political parties have only begun to unveil their election manifestos in July, indicating that it is not in fact outlining of their pledges in manifestos based on which they wish to seek citizens votes.
While a large number of political parties are contesting the general election, most relevant are the larger political parties vying for obtaining the majority of seats to be able to form a government in the center and in four provinces.
A comparison among parties on their manifesto promises can only be carried out by looking at the level of detail devoted by each party to critical issues, detail of how to carry out and implement policies, specificity, resources needed and where the resources will come from.
Political parties in developed democracies have to include costing proposals if, for instance, they pledge to reduce or increase education or health budgets.
While parties have articulated policy pledges in 2018 manifestos, these are given without providing sound costing and therefore equate to mere promises or wish-lists leading to questions whether parties will be able to follow these once elected to power and if citizens can adequately analyze soundness of the manifesto commitments made by the parties.
General Election 2018 manifestos of seven political parties are analyzed here over a range of key issues to gauge how parties plan to manage excessive population growth, address impending water shortage, boost economic growth rate, and generate sufficient employment. The comparative analysis also looks for targets to improve quality of education and health care and plans to improve the effectiveness of civil-military consultation on National Security.
Political parties that have been in power at the center and in provinces have outlined a relatively detailed and focused account of their policy plans but no party has provided extensive outlines of policies providing details of how to carry out and implement policies, specificity, resources needed and where the resources will come from.
The party position table provides, at a glance, the level of detail of key policies outlined in their 2018 manifestos:

– Aasiya Riaz, joint director at PILDAT, a leading Pakistani think-tank she co-founded in 2001. She leads PILDAT’s projects and activities. She has more than 15 years’ experience of providing thought leadership in governance and democracy, policy, communication and management while she promotes strengthening democratic and political institutions under the overall ambit of rule of law.
Trained in media and political communication at the London School of Economics, Aasiya has also worked with the mainstream press and electronic media in Pakistan as a political analyst. She was a Reagan-Fascell Democracy Fellow at the National Endowment for Democracy, USA, as well as a distinguished fellow at the Center on Democracy, Development, and the Rule of Law at Stanford University.
Aasiya regularly appears on national and international media for political analysis and commentaries while she is invited to lecture at Pakistan’s premium public policy institutions as well as many national and international think-tanks and universities.

Twitter: @AasiyaRiaz


Crowds worldwide rage or celebrate after Iran strikes, 23 killed in Pakistan

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Crowds worldwide rage or celebrate after Iran strikes, 23 killed in Pakistan

  • At least 10 were killed in Karachi, 11 in northern city of Skardu and two in Islamabad during violent clashes between protesters and law enforcers
  • In other parts of the world, such as Paris, Iranian exiles take to the streets to celebrate the killing of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei

KARACHI, Pakistan/BAGHDAD: Demonstrations against the US-Israeli bombing campaign in Iran turned violent in Pakistan and ​Iraq on Sunday, while in other parts of the world Iranian exiles took to the streets to celebrate the death of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

At least 23 protesters were killed in clashes in Pakistan, including 10 in the port of Karachi where security guards at the US consulate fired on demonstrators who breached the outer wall, 11 in the northern city of Skardu where the crowd torched a UN office, and two in Islamabad.

In Iraq, police fired tear gas and stun grenades to scatter hundreds of pro-Iranian protesters who had gathered outside the Green Zone diplomatic compound in the capital Baghdad, where the US embassy is located.

But in Paris, a joyous crowd of thousands turned out to celebrate, waving flags of Iran’s pre-revolutionary monarchy, some carrying ‌red roses and ‌bottles of champagne.

Iran’s neighbors to the east and west, Pakistan and Iraq have the ​world’s ‌largest ⁠Shia Muslim ​populations ⁠after Iran, and were the scenes of some of the worst unrest from crowds angry at the US-Israeli attacks.

Protesters in Karachi chanted “Death to America! Death to Israel!” at the consulate, where Reuters reporters heard gunfire and saw tear gas fired in surrounding streets.

Consulate security staff opened fire at a crowd who were pushed back after breaching the outer security layer, said Sukhdev Assardas Hemnani, a local government spokesman. The demonstrators also set a vehicle ablaze outside the main gate and clashed with police, he said.

“We are in constant touch with consulate officials. They are all safe,” Hemnani added.

The US Embassy in Islamabad said in a post on X it was monitoring reports of ⁠demonstrations and advised US citizens to observe good personal security practices. The consulate in Karachi and ‌embassy in Islamabad did not respond to Reuters requests for further comment.

Thirty-four people ‌were injured, police said. Karachi’s Civil Hospital said all those killed and injured ​were hit with gunshots. The provincial government of Sindh ordered ‌an inquiry.

UN OFFICE SET ON FIRE

Skardu, where the UN building was set ablaze, is in Gilgit Baltistan in the ‌north, the only region administered by Pakistan where Shias are the plurality.

“A large number of protesters have gathered outside the UN office and burned down the building,” local government spokesperson Shabbir Mir told Reuters. The figure of 11 killed was provided by a government official and an intelligence official, both on condition of anonymity.

Protesters also took to the streets in other parts of Pakistan, carrying black flags and chanting “Down with America!” and anti-Israel slogans. In the ‌central city of Lahore, police said hundreds gathered outside the US consulate. There were some small-scale clashes with police, who fired tear gas.

Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi urged protesters to ⁠remain peaceful. “We stand with you,” he ⁠said, adding that every Pakistani was as grief-stricken as the people of Iran.

In the capital Islamabad, all roads leading to the Red Zone, which houses diplomatic missions were blocked to traffic, police said. Police fired tear gas and live bullets when thousands of protesters tried to march toward the diplomatic enclave, killing two and injuring nearly 10, two officials said on condition of anonymity.

Elsewhere, protests took place in countries where Iran has influence. In Kano, a part of Nigeria with a sizable Shia Muslim minority, thousands marched peacefully, waving Iranian flags and pictures of Khamenei.

But in Western countries and other areas with large populations of Iranian exiles, many came out to celebrate.

In the crowd in Paris, some people held aloft portraits of loved ones killed under decades of Iran’s clerical rule. Others waved flags of Israel, the United States and France.

In Lisbon, exiled Iranians gathered outside the Iranian embassy.

“We had a party last night, up to 3 a.m. We danced, we chanted, we sang and sang, and that was ​really amazing,” said Maximilien Jazani, 57. Iranians “want to go to ​vote and to choose the kind of government they want.”