Pakistan regulator seeks response of ex-PM Khan party on pleas against ‘rigged’ intra-party elections 

Activists of opposition party Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) take part of anti-government rally demanding early election in Karachi on October 28, 2022. (AFP/File)
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Updated 08 December 2023
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Pakistan regulator seeks response of ex-PM Khan party on pleas against ‘rigged’ intra-party elections 

  • Incarcerated ex-PM Khan’s party elected Barrister Gohar Khan its chairman along with other office bearers last week 
  • At least 14 petitioners have approached the election regulator questioning the authenticity of PTI’s intra-party polls 

ISLAMABAD: The Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) on Friday issued a notice to ex-premier Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party, seeking its response to allegations of “rigged and fraudulent” intra-party polls held last week. 

The PTI held the intra-party polls following a directive from the election regulator to elect its office bearers to be eligible for the election symbol, bat, ahead of the national elections scheduled to be held on February 8. The party elected Barrister Gohar Khan as its chairman, following his nomination by ex-PM Khan. 

Khan has been in jail since August after being convicted in a graft case, while his party faces a crackdown over violent protests in May that led to the torching of state buildings. The party has been struggling to retain its electoral symbol for the national polls, while fighting disintegration. 

Akbar S. Babar, a founding PTI member, along with thirteen other applicants challenged the recent intra-party elections and raised questions over the authenticity of the polls that were held in Peshawar through an online application. 

“A man is made chairman [of PTI] behind closed doors,” Babar’s counsel, Ahmed Hassan, remarked at the hearing, saying the PTI kept the candidates and the voter list secret. 

Hassan pointed out the party neither displayed a final list of candidates, nor any paperwork was done for the polls. He urged the commission, led by Chief Election Commissioner Sikandar Sultan Raja, to direct the PTI to hold fresh intra-party polls to provide an opportunity to all aspiring candidates to contest the polls. 

At this, Ikram Ullah, one of the commission members, remarked the election regulator could not order the intra-party polls to be held again and again. 

“Forget the fresh intra-party polls as the Elections Act is very clear about it,” he said. 

Meanwhile, the PTI challenged the election commission’s decision of nullifying its June 2022 intra-party elections in the Lahore High Court on Thursday, saying the ECP lacked the authority to question internal elections of any political party. 

The party accused the ECP of “discrimination” by raising objections over its intra-party elections without any legal basis. 


UN rights chief says 56 Afghan civilians killed since Pakistan conflict escalates

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UN rights chief says 56 Afghan civilians killed since Pakistan conflict escalates

  • Death toll includes 24 children and six women, with 129 others injured
  • UN says about 115,000 Afghans, 3,000 Pakistanis displaced by fighting along border

GENEVA::The United Nations rights chief said Friday that 56 Afghan civilians had been killed — nearly half of them children — since hostilities with neighboring Pakistan intensified last week.

“I plead with all parties to bring an end to the conflict, and to prioritize helping those experiencing extreme hardship,” Volker Turk said in a statement.

The neighbors have clashed along the frontier since February 26, when Afghanistan launched a border offensive in retaliation for Pakistani air strikes.

Islamabad has hit back along the border and with fresh air strikes, bombing multiple sites including the former US air base at Bagram, the capital Kabul and the southern city of Kandahar.

Turk said that since the intensification of hostilities, “56 civilians, including 24 children and six women, have been killed.”

“A further 129 people, including 41 children and 31 women, have been injured,” he said.

And since the start of the year, the numbers are even higher, with 69 civilians killed in Afghanistan and 141 injured, he said.

Pakistan insists it has not killed any civilians in the conflict. Casualty claims from both sides are difficult to verify independently.

The UN refugee agency said Thursday that around 115,000 Afghans and 3,000 people in Pakistan had been displaced by the fighting in the past week.

“Civilians on both sides of the border are now having to flee from air strikes, heavy artillery fire, mortar shelling and gunfire,” Turk said.

He lamented that a new wave of violence was affecting people “whose lives have been tormented by violence and misery for so long.”

He highlighted that over two million Afghans had returned to Afghanistan since Pakistan started to implement its “Illegal Foreigners Repatriation Plan” in September 2023.

And nearly as many were believed to remain in Pakistan, “where many face hardship and constant fear of arrest and deportation,” he said.

“As a result of the violence, humanitarian assistance is unable to reach many of those desperately in need. This is piling misery on misery,” the rights chief said.

He called on “the Pakistan military and Afghan de facto security forces to end immediately their fighting, and to prioritize helping the millions who depend on aid.”