Pakistan’s election body seeks amendments to existing laws to ensure transparent polls

In this file photo, taken on August 2, 2022, paramilitary soldiers stand guard outside the Pakistan’s election commission building in Islamabad. (Photo courtesy: AFP/File)
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Updated 11 April 2023
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Pakistan’s election body seeks amendments to existing laws to ensure transparent polls

  • The election commission blames an ‘overbearing’ judicial attitude for its ‘eroding’ constitutional authority
  • It requests parliament to empower it to announce or alter election schedule without any external interference

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s election regulatory body said on Monday its authority to conduct free and fair polls across the country had been “eroded” in the wake of the recent political developments, asking legislators to empower it to determine the election program on its own by amending relevant legal provisions.

The request was made by Chief Election Commissioner Sikandar Sultan Raja in a letter to the National Assembly speaker and Senate chairman after the country’s top court dismissed his institution’s decision to postpone the Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) polls and reschedule them in October this year.

The letter said the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) was an autonomous body formed under Article 218 (2) of the constitution and was required to conduct transparent elections by making necessary arrangements with the help of other state institutions.

It added that the commission was the “sole arbiter” to decide whether conducive environment existed to conduct the election or not, though the recent Supreme Court judgments in the Punjab and KP election delay case had divested it of its constitutional power.

“[The] ECP, in keeping with its mandate under Article 218 (3) to ensure free and transparent elections, has consistently strived to uphold the writ of law, fair play and merit in letter and spirit,” said the letter. “However, ... its writ has systematically been challenged on several occasions. In practice, ECP’s authority has been eroded.”

Referring to an “overbearing” judicial attitude in the past, the chief election commissioner asked whether it was still possible for the ECP to conduct free and fair elections in the country.

The letter suggested amendments to Sections 57 (1) and 58 of the election laws to empower the ECP to announce or alter election schedule without any external institutional interference.

It may be recalled that the Supreme Court of Pakistan had ordered elections in the country’s most prosperous and populous Punjab province on May 14. The apex court also said the decision by the election commission to delay polls to October 8 from April 30 owing to security reasons and lack of funding was “unconstitutional.”

The top court directed the federal government to release Rs21 billion ($74 million) in funds to the ECP by April 10 so that it could conduct the polls, directing the election regulator to submit a report on the matter by April 11.


Pakistan says 14 suspected militants killed in separate raids in insurgency-hit Balochistan

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Pakistan says 14 suspected militants killed in separate raids in insurgency-hit Balochistan

  • Counterterrorism department says eight suspects killed in Quetta operation, six in Barkhan raid
  • Security forces have stepped up anti-militancy operations after last month’s coordinated attacks in Balochistan

QUETTA: Pakistani security forces killed 14 suspected militants in two separate counterterrorism operations in southwestern Balochistan province, police said on Wednesday, as authorities intensify action against insurgent groups after recent large-scale attacks in the region.

Balochistan, Pakistan’s largest but least populated province bordering Iran and Afghanistan, has faced a decades-long separatist insurgency in which militants target security forces, infrastructure and civilians. The violence escalated last month when coordinated attacks across multiple districts in the province killed 36 civilians and 22 security forces. The state says 216 militants were killed in subsequent operations.

Separatist groups such as the Baloch Liberation Army (BLA) accuse the state of exploiting the resource-rich region, a claim Islamabad denies.

“In Quetta’s Darakhshan area, eight suspected terrorists were killed in an exchange of fire during a Counter Terrorism Department operation,” a CTD spokesperson said in a statement, adding that three CTD personnel were also injured and weapons and ammunition were recovered.

The spokesperson said the killed suspects were believed to belong to a banned organization.

In a separate intelligence-based operation in Barkhan district, security forces killed six suspected militants during another firefight.

“During the operation, weapons and explosive material were recovered from the terrorists,” the spokesperson said, adding that the suspects were involved in sabotage activities and their bodies were shifted to Rakhni Hospital.

Security officials say raids and targeted operations will continue as part of broader efforts to dismantle militant networks operating across the province.