ISLAMABAD: Former prime minister Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party announced on Saturday it would challenge the country’s election regulator’s decision of taking back its election symbol, a cricket bat, in a court on Tuesday, hoping the judiciary would restore it back to the party.
The Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) announced the decision after a disgruntled PTI leader, Akbar S. Babar, challenged the PTI’s intraparty elections held on Dec. 2 and urged the watchdog to declare the exercise null and void for violating rules. Babar said the PTI had neither displayed a final list of candidates nor was any paperwork done for the polls.
Last month, the ECP declared the PTI’s intraparty elections in June 2022 as invalid, giving the party 20 days to rearrange the contest to retain cricket bat as its election symbol for which it had applied. The PTI elected Barrister Gohar Khan as its chairman along with other office bearers and submitted the results with the election commission.
However, the ECP announced its verdict on Friday, ruling that the PTI had not complied with its directions and failed to hold intraparty election in accordance with the party’s own constitution along with the Election Act, 2017, and Election Rules, 2017.
The decision, which led to the party losing its election symbol, was described as “flawed, illegal, biased and a serious attack on the transparency of the elections” by a PTI spokesperson.
“We have done all the consultation,” Barrister Khan told reporters in Rawalpindi. “It’s just that we have not received the order of the election commission. The moment we get its certified copy, we will file our petitions on Tuesday morning since there is Christmas and Quaid-e-Azam Day on Monday.”
He maintained the ECP’s decision was not sustainable, adding that the judiciary would restore the party’s election symbol.
Earlier, the PTI said in a statement the electoral watchdog had once again proved it was not interested in conducting free and transparent polls.
“This biased, prejudiced and illegal verdict by the commission could not stand and it would be challenged in the Supreme Court.”
Election symbols are crucial in Pakistan where the adult literacy rate is just 58 percent, according to World Bank data.
The bat is reflective of Khan’s past as a successful cricketer. The former prime minister led Pakistan to their only 50-over World Cup win in 1992, propelling him to an unrivaled position among Pakistan’s cricket greats.
The ECP decision came less than two months before Pakistan is scheduled to head to the polls, but the PTI said it would contest and win the upcoming elections.
“The PTI would contest the forthcoming general elections with its electoral symbol of ‘bat’ and would secure historic victory in the polls despite all odds,” the PTI statement read.
The attempts to deprive the representative political party of millions of Pakistanis of its electoral symbol and to keep it “out of the electoral process” would never succeed, it added.
Political parties and their members in Pakistan are often tangled in legal proceedings that rights monitors say are orchestrated by the powerful military, which has ruled the country directly for more than half of its history and continues to enjoy immense power.
Khan’s PTI party has also been struggling against a widespread crackdown, with leading party figures either jailed or forced to leave the party.
The ex-premier, who has been locked up since August, has accused Pakistan’s powerful military, the ECP, and his political rivals of colluding to keep him and the PTI out of elections.
Pakistan’s military, the ECP, and the caretaker government deny the allegations.
Ex-PM Khan’s party to challenge election regulator’s decision on party symbol on Tuesday
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Ex-PM Khan’s party to challenge election regulator’s decision on party symbol on Tuesday
- The regulator stripped PTI of the election symbol for failing to comply with its directives on intraparty polls
- Election symbols are crucial in Pakistan where adult literacy rate is just 58 percent, according to World Bank data
Death toll in Pakistan shopping plaza fire rises to 67, officials say
- Rescue teams still searching for damaged Gul Plaza in Karachi where blaze erupted on Saturday, says police surgeon
- Karachi has a long history of deadly fires, often linked to poor safety standards, weak regulatory enforcement
KARACHI: The death toll from a devastating fire at a shopping plaza in Pakistan’s southern port city of Karachi jumped to 67 on Thursday after police and a hospital official confirmed that the remains of dozens more people had been found.
Police surgeon Dr. Summaiya Syed said rescue teams were still searching the severely damaged Gul Plaza in the Karachi, where the blaze erupted on Saturday.
Most remains were discovered in fragments, making identification extremely difficult, but the deaths of 67 people have been confirmed, she said. Asad Raza, a senior police official in Karachi, also confirmed the death toll. Authorities previously had confirmed 34 deaths.
Family members of the missing have stayed near the destroyed plaza and hospital, even after providing their DNA for testing. Some have tried to enter the building forcibly, criticizing the rescue efforts as too slow.
“They are not conducting the search properly,” said Khair-un-Nisa, pointing toward the rescuers. She stood outside the building in tears, explaining that a relative who had left to go shopping has been missing since the blaze.
Another woman, Saadia Saeed, said her brother has been trapped inside the building since Saturday night, and she does not know what has happened to him.
“I am ready to go inside the plaza to look for him, but police are not allowing me,” she said.
There was no immediate comment from authorities about accusations they have been too slow.
Many relatives of the missing claim more lives could have been saved if the government had acted more swiftly. Authorities have deployed police around the plaza to prevent relatives from entering the unstable structure, while rescuers continue their careful search.
Investigators say the blaze erupted at a time when most shop owners were either closing for the day or had already left. Since then, the Sindh provincial government has said around 70 people were missing after the flames spread rapidly, fueled by goods such as cosmetics, clothing, and plastic items.
The cause of the fire remains under investigation, though police have indicated that a short circuit may have triggered the blaze.
Karachi has a long history of deadly fires, often linked to poor safety standards, weak regulatory enforcement, and illegal construction.
In November 2023, a shopping mall fire killed 10 people and injured 22. One of Pakistan’s deadliest industrial disasters occurred in 2012, when a garment factory fire killed at least 260 people.










