Pakistan's president invites chief election commissioner for meeting on date for polls

Voters cast their ballot at a polling station during the by-election for national assembly seats, in Karachi, Pakistan on October 16, 2022. (AFP/File)
Short Url
Updated 23 August 2023
Follow

Pakistan's president invites chief election commissioner for meeting on date for polls

  • President Alvi says he is bound by law to announce election date no later than 90 days from date of dissolution of assemblies
  • Alvi invites Chief Election Commissioner Sikandar Sultan Raja for talks either today, Wednesday or tomorrow, Thursday

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani President Arif Alvi on Wednesday wrote a letter to Chief Election Commissioner Sikandar Sultan Raja, inviting him for talks either today, Wednesday, or on Thursday to fix an 'appropriate' date for the upcoming general elections in Pakistan. 

Alvi dissolved the National Assembly on the advice of the outgoing prime minister Shehbaz Sharif on August 9 before the official five-year tenure of the assembly was set to expire on August 12. 

According to Pakistan's constitution, the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) is bound to hold elections within 90 days when assemblies are dissolved before their official tenure expires. The polls, however, are likely to be delayed as the ECP has to redraw hundreds of federal and provincial constituencies based on Pakistan's latest population census results. Last Thursday, the ECP said it would finalize the exercise by December 14, effectively delaying polls beyond 90 days from the date of dissolution of the National Assembly. 

In his letter to Raja, the president said he was bound by Article 48 (5) of Pakistan's constitution to declare a date for upcoming elections not later than 90 days from when the assembly was dissolved. 

"Foregoing in view, the Chief Election Commissioner is invited for a meeting with the President today or tomorrow to fix an appropriate date," the letter concluded. 

On Tuesday, Caretaker Prime Minister Anwaar-ul-Haq Kakar said his government would rule only for a “limited period of time” to fulfill its constitutional mandate of organizing general elections in Pakistan. 

Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) and former Prime Minister Imran Khan's Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party have both rejected the timeline for redrawing of national and provincial constituencies announced by the election regulator. The ECP, however, says it is constitutionally bound to "delimit constituencies after every census officially published.


Pakistan expresses concern over vigilante attacks targeting Christians, Muslims in India

Updated 6 sec ago
Follow

Pakistan expresses concern over vigilante attacks targeting Christians, Muslims in India

  • Rights organizations have raised alarm over vandalism by far-right Indian Hindu groups to disrupt Christmas events
  • Pakistan urges international community to take steps to protect vulnerable communities from future attacks in India

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s foreign office spokesperson on Monday expressed concern over acts of vandalism and violence targeting Christians and Muslims in India, urging the international community to protect vulnerable communities there. 

Christian and rights organizations have raised alarm over attempts by some Hindu far-right groups recently to disrupt Christmas celebrations in India. These included a series of attacks targeting members of the minority community there. 

In one of the videos that went viral on social media, a local leader of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s BJP party, Anju Bharvaga, can be seen assaulting a visually impaired Christian woman attending a Christmas event in Jabalpur city. Christian watchdog Open Doors International has said it recorded over 60 alleged attacks targeting Christians across India during the Christmas period. 

“The persecution of minorities in India is a matter of deep concern,” the Pakistani foreign office said in a statement. 

“Recent condemnable incidents of vandalism during Christmas, as well as state-sponsored campaigns targeting Muslims — including the demolition of their homes and repeated lynchings, notably the case of Muhammad Akhlaq, in which the state worked to shield the perpetrators from accountability — have deepened fear and alienation among Muslims,” it added. 

Akhlaq, then 50, was beaten to death by a Hindu mob in 2015 in India’s Uttar Pradesh state after rumors spread he had stored and consumed beef, a claim his family denies.

The BJP-led state government of Uttar Pradesh recently asked a local court to drop the charges against the men involved in his lynching, triggering anger among rights activists in India.

Pakistan’s foreign office said the list of such victims of vigilante attacks in India is “sadly long.”

“The international community should take note of these developments and take appropriate steps to help protect the fundamental rights of vulnerable communities in India,” it said. 

A report by US State Department in August said the Indian government took “minimal credible steps” or actions to identify and punish officials who committed human rights abuses in the country. 

Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch also fault Modi’s government for its treatment of minorities in India. 

They point to rising hate speeches, a religion-based citizenship law the UN calls “fundamentally discriminatory,” anti-conversion legislation that challenges freedom of belief, the 2019 removal of Muslim-majority Kashmir’s special status, and the demolition of properties owned by Muslims.

Modi denies discrimination and says his policies, such as food subsidy programs and electrification drives, benefit everyone.