Defense ministry moves Supreme Court seeking elections across Pakistan on same date

A general view of the Pakistan's Supreme Court is pictured in Islamabad on April 6, 2022. (AFP/File)
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Updated 19 April 2023
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Defense ministry moves Supreme Court seeking elections across Pakistan on same date

  • Top judiciary and ex-PM Khan’s party have been locked in a standoff with federal government over provincial snap polls
  • PM Sharif’s government says it is not economically viable to hold snap elections in Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa

ISLAMABAD: The Ministry of Defense, which is responsible for allocating security for election duty, on Tuesday moved the Supreme Court seeking that polls be held across Pakistan on the same date, deepening discord between the judiciary and government amid months of political and economic turmoil.

The top judiciary and the opposition Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party of former Prime Minister Imran Khan have been locked in a standoff with the coalition government at the center over provincial snap polls. The political turmoil is happening amid soaring inflation and an acute balance of payments crisis as talks with the IMF to secure $1.1 billion in funding, part of a $6.5 billion bailout package agreed to in 2019, have so far yielded no results.

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s government says it is not economically viable to hold snap elections in two provinces, Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, where Khan had dissolved the governments in January this year, ahead of a general election due in October.

Voting is constitutionally mandated within 90 days of the dissolution of a legislative assembly.

The Supreme Court on April 4 ordered snap polls in the most populated Punjab province to be held on May 14, and said a date could be agreed later for the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, pending some technical issues. The court also ruled that the Election Commission of Pakistan’s (ECP) decision to postpone polls to the Punjab assembly till October 8 was “unconstitutional.”

“The instant application may be granted, the order dated 04-04-2023 passed in C.P. No. 5/2023 may kindly be recalled with the directions that the general elections to the National and all Provincial Assemblies be held together, upon completion of the term of the National and the other two Provincial Assemblies i.e. of Sindh and Balochistan,” the defense ministry said in a plea filed with the top court on Tuesday, referring to the two other major provinces of Pakistan.

Khan had ordered the dissolution of legislative assemblies run by his party in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Punjab to try to force the government to hold early national elections. He has been campaigning for snap polls since he was ousted in a parliamentary no confidence vote in April last year.

In response to the Supreme Court regarding elections in Punjab, the ECP also said on Tuesday that holding polls on May 14 was becoming “impossible” as both funds and security arrangements were not in place.

“At least 466,000 personnel are required for security in Punjab,” the ECP said in its reply. “In view of ground facts, October 8 is the appropriate date to conduct elections.”


TV reporter dies after falling from rooftop during Pakistan kite-flying festival

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TV reporter dies after falling from rooftop during Pakistan kite-flying festival

  • Pakistan's Lahore marked the Basant festival on Feb. 6-8 after the Punjab government lifted an 18-year-old ban on kite flying
  • Malik Zain, a reporter affiliated with GNN news channel, fell from a four-storey building while flying a kite, Lahore police say

ISLAMABAD: A television reporter died after falling from a rooftop while flying a kite during the Basant spring festival in the eastern Pakistani city of Lahore, police and hospital authorities confirmed on Sunday.

Pakistan's Lahore marked the Basant festival on Feb. 6-8 after the Punjab provincial government this year lifted a ban on kite flying after 18 years, with extensive safety measures in place.

The festival, which marks the onset of spring, was banned in 2008 after deaths and injuries to motorcyclists and pedestrians from stray kite strings, sometimes coated with metal to make them more formidable in mid-air battles.

Malik Zain, a reporter affiliated with private news channel GNN, fell from the rooftop of a building during the final day of Basant celebrations in the eastern Pakistani city, according to police.

"Lahore journalist Malik Zain died after falling from the fourth floor while flying a kite in Gulshan-e-Ravi during Basant," the Lahore police said in a statement.

The reporter was shifted to the government-run Mian Munshi District Headquarters Hospital where he was pronounced dead, with cardiopulmonary arrest mentioned as the cause of death.

"Head injury due to fall from height," hospital authorities diagnosed in their report into Zain’s death.

The development came hours after Punjab Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz extended timings for Basant till early Monday morning.

“I am pleased to announce that Basant celebrations timings are being extended till 5:00 AM tomorrow morning,” CM Nawaz said in an X post on Sunday, highlighting the festivity, unity and joy across Lahore.

“This extension is a reward for the people of Lahore for celebrating Basant with great discipline and for responsibly following all safety SOPs (standard operating procedures).”

The Punjab government ‍banned the use of metallic or chemical-coated strings during the festival. Kites ‍and strings had to bear individual QR codes so they could be traced, and ‍motorcyclists had to attach safety rods to their bikes to fend off stray thread.

Some 4,600 producers had registered with the authorities to sell kites and strings ahead of the festival. Authorities had made it mandatory for owners to register rooftops with 30 or more revelers, while dozens of roofs ​had been declared off-limits after inspections.