In northwest Pakistan, election material printing takes a hit due to inflation, political uncertainty 

A worker prints an election poster of Pakistan People's Party (PPP) at a printing press in Karachi on January 11, 2024, ahead of the country’s upcoming general elections. (AFP/File)
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Updated 20 January 2024
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In northwest Pakistan, election material printing takes a hit due to inflation, political uncertainty 

  • Elections in the politically and economically troubled South Asian nation were originally due to be held in November 
  • Litigations involving election candidates, security situation cast further doubts on whether polls will be held in country 

PESHAWAR: As a chugging sound echoes at regular, brief intervals, Jahangir Khan, 35, keenly observes sheets of paper passing through a large machine that prints various features, slogans and promises on them inside his shop in the northwestern Pakistani city of Peshawar. 

Khan’s business usually booms in the election season, but this time he is far from witnessing the same number of orders he previously received amid rampant inflation and political uncertainty in the country. 

Elections in the politically and economically troubled South Asian nation were originally due to be held in November, 90 days after the dissolution of the lower house of parliament in August, but they are now scheduled for February 8 due to fresh demarcation of constituencies under a new census. 

Khan, who runs a printing press at Peshawar’s Jhangi Mohalla Printing Press Market, sees the upcoming national elections as a “joke,” given their stark difference from the past electoral contests. 

“In the 2018 elections, work was very high, that was an election,” Khan told Arab News. “This time it is a joke, we hardly get one, two or three election-related orders. In my shop, only two orders are being completed right now.” 




Workers print election posters on a printing press in Quetta on January 8, 2024, ahead of the upcoming general elections. (AFP/File)

Khan’s shop is one of 5,000 printing presses in the Jhangi Mohalla Printing Press Market, which employs more than 9,000 workers. 

But despite the national elections approaching, the market wears a deserted look as compared to the buzz witnessed during the previous elections. 

Zafar Khattak, president of the Jhangi Mohalla Printing Press Market association, says in the previous elections, candidates got ample time to run their campaigns which benefitted their business. He said workers at the market would work day and night for at least two months to meet the orders in the past. 

“These are [hard] times for the printing industry, like politicians,” Khattak told Arab News. 

The 52-year-old said printing press owners and related industry had the materials, including printing paper and ink, stored, but they got only around 20 days for the printing of posters and pamphlets for election candidates before the country goes to polls on Feb. 8. 

“The work is going on, but it is not of the level that is required,” Khattak said. “In the past, we would expect [more], but now we work half a night and pay the bills of electricity and rents of shops, and the ones in debt are hardly able to pay their debts.” 




Workers using screen printing method print election banners for the Grand Democratic Alliance (GDA) party, at a workshop in Karachi on January 12, 2024, ahead of the upcoming general elections. (AFP/File)

On January 13, the Election Commission of Pakistan allotted symbols to election candidates and political parties contesting the upcoming polls, after which political parties and their nominees as well as independent candidates have kicked off their mass contact campaigns. 

Sohail Ahmad, provincial spokesperson for the ECP, said a pending verdict on the ECP’s decision to withdraw ‘bat’ election symbol from ex-PM Imran’s party delayed the allotment of poll symbols. 

“This time, political parties got less time [for campaigning] because the symbols were allotted some six-seven days late because of the court decision on Pakatan Tehreek-e-Insaf’s bat symbol,” Ahmad told Arab News. 

Election commission normally allots symbols to political parties and candidates around 25 days before the polling day after which political parties and candidates formally kick off their campaigns, according to Ahmad. Electioneering comes to an end 48 hours before the election day. 

The ECP delayed the elections to February 8 to demarcate electoral constituencies under a new census held last year. The acceptance and rejection of candidatures and appeals by candidates against them as well as a precarious security situation, particularly in KP, have continued to cast doubts about the conduct of polls in recent weeks. 

Malak Sajjad, who is contesting the provincial assembly election from PK-16 constituency in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s Lower Dir district on the Awami National Party’s ticket, said they were not sure of the conduct of the elections this time and were still getting their banners printed. 

“We have just kicked off our campaigns and are trying to get the banners printed and party flags installed at different locations,” said the candidate, who also took part in the 2018 elections. 

“It was confusing this time whether the elections would take place or not, so we started our campaign only three, four days ago and the printing of [banners, etc] has gone down by up to 40 percent.” 

During the 2018 elections, Sajjad said, things were clear and they had started campaigning even before the allotment of a poll symbol to him. He, however, said they were also more focused on social media this time as compared to the past. 

“We are a little more focused on social media as it has a large presence of youth and we are trying to appeal to them,” the ANP candidate said. 

Khattak also pointed out inflation as a factor behind the slow pace of election-related activity at the market. 

“We would take a sticker (printing paper) at Rs22-23 [hundred per packet] in the past and now it is 40-45 [hundred per packet],” he regretted. “This is the situation.” 

The cost of printing posters and stickers has also increased manifolds as compared to the 2018 national elections, according to Khan. 

This has forced candidates to cut down on the election expenses, including printing of banners, posters and handouts. 

“The candidates take rate from so many shops and the one giving them the lowest price is given the order and [that too of] hardly a thousand posters,” he said. 

“During previous elections, we would print 10 thousand, 15 thousand and up to 20 thousand, now no one brings an order of more than a thousand pieces.” 


In blow to ruling coalition, Pakistan’s electoral watchdog suspends 77 lawmakers elected on reserved seats

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In blow to ruling coalition, Pakistan’s electoral watchdog suspends 77 lawmakers elected on reserved seats

  • Ruling follows top court overruling earlier verdict that party aligned with ex-PM Khan backed candidates not eligible for reserved seats 
  • Suspension of lawmakers means ruling coalition has lost two-thirds majority in National Assembly, which is required to amend constitution 

Pakistan’s election regulator has suspended 77 lawmakers elected on reserved seats, dealing a blow to the fragile ruling coalition led by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif which has lost the third-thirds parliamentary majority needed to make constitutional amendments. 

The Election Commission of Pakistan’s ruling comes a week after the Supreme Court overruled a verdict by the Peshawar High Court (PHC) that a party aligned with candidates backed by former premier Imran Khan was not eligible for reserved seats in the legislature. 

Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party couldn’t contest the Feb. 8 elections under its traditional electoral symbol, a cricket bat, which it was denied on technical grounds, and subsequently struck an alliance with another party, the Sunni Ittehad Council (SIC), in a bid to secure reserved seats for women and minorities in parliament. Under Pakistan’s election rules, political parties are allotted reserved seats in proportion to the number of parliamentary seats they win in the election. This completes the National Assembly’s total strength of 336 seats. 

The Election Commission had ruled in March that the SIC was not eligible for reserved seats, a decision the alliance had appealed in the Peshawar High Court, which rejected the petition. The SIC then approached the Supreme Court to appeal the high court’s decision, which last week suspended the PHC’s ruling. 

“Pursuant to the order on 6th May, 2024 passed by the honorable Supreme Court of Pakistan, the notifications of the following returned candidates against under mentioned categories of reserved seats are hereby suspended till further orders,” the ECP’s notification read.

With the ECP’s notification, the strength in the National Assembly of PM Sharif’s ruling Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) has reduced from 121 to 107 while that of its main coalition partner Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) is down from 72 to 67. 

This means the ruling coalition has lost its two-thirds majority in the National Assembly, with its numerical strength decreasing to 209 from 228. In the 336-member National Assembly, the figure to attain two-thirds majority is 224, without which the government cannot enact reforms or amend laws.

Sharif formed a weak coalition with other parties after February general elections produced a hung parliament. The PML-N’s 79 and the PPP’s 54 seats together made a simple majority in parliament to form a government and they also roped in smaller parties in the coalition.

Candidates backed by Khan won the most seats, 93, but did not have the numbers to form a government. Khan and his party have rejected the results of the elections, alleging widespread rigging.
 
According to the breakdown of the 77 suspended lawmakers, 44 belong to Sharif’s PML-N party, 15 to the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP), 13 to the Jamiat Ulama-e-Islam-Fazal (JUI-F), and one each to the Muttahida Qaumi Movement-Pakistan (MQM-P), Istehkam-e-Pakistan Party (IPP), Awami National Party (ANP), Pakistan Muslim League Quaid (PML-Q) and Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf Parliamentarians (PTI-P).

The 77 suspended lawmakers include 22 legislators elected on reserved seats in the National Assembly, 25 in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) Assembly, 27 in the Punjab Assembly, and three in the Sindh Assembly. 


Azad Kashmir demonstrators call off protests as government cuts electricity, wheat prices after violent protests

Updated 37 min 22 sec ago
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Azad Kashmir demonstrators call off protests as government cuts electricity, wheat prices after violent protests

  • Protests began on May 11 and lasted for days until the Pakistan government approved $83 million in subsidies
  • One police officer and three young demonstrators were killed as protests turned violent in the Himalayan region

ISLAMABAD: An alliance of civil rights groups on Tuesday called off a protest that had lasted for several days across Azad Kashmir and led to serious clashes with police and paramilitary Rangers after the government met its demand to reduce electricity and wheat prices in the region.

The Jammu Kashmir Joint Awami Action Committee (JAAC) organized the protests that started on May 11, seeking subsidized wheat flour and a reduction in electricity tariffs to bring them in line with the hydropower generation cost in Azad Kashmir.

The demonstrations led to four deaths, including one police officer who was reportedly killed by protesters in gunfire, while three demonstrators lost their lives in clashes with Rangers in Muzaffarabad.

Azad Jammu and Kashmir (AJK) Prime Minister Anwar-ul-Haq Chaudhry said at a news conference on Monday his government had notified reduced wheat and electricity prices after the Pakistani government approved Rs23 billion ($83 million) in subsidies.

“On the appeal of the Awami Action Committee, it has been decided to end the ongoing lockdown and wheel-jam strike across Azad Kashmir,” Amjad Ali Khan, a member of the JAAC core committee, told Arab News on Tuesday.

He said JAAC demanded compensation for the three young demonstrators killed in clashes with Rangers. He also informed that a day of mourning and a shutter-down strike would be held today across Kashmir to honor the three demonstrators.

Speaking about the details of JAAC’s agreement with the government, Khan said the authorities had agreed to drop all the cases and release the arrested individuals.

“The Awami Action Committee demanded the formation of a judicial commission to investigate police violence in the Mirpur Division and Muzaffarabad,” he added, saying the judicial commission’s investigation should be made public and those responsible should be punished.

Abdul Majid Khan, a spokesperson for the AJK government, said the authorities had shown utmost restraint to pacify the situation.

“All the demands of the protesters have been fulfilled, and the situation will hopefully return to normalcy now,” he told Arab News.

Pakistan’s information minister, Attaullah Tarar, said the situation in Azad Kashmir had been addressed after the federal government approved the grant to deal with people’s concerns.

“With the grant given by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, the issue has been resolved to meet the people’s demands,” he told the media in Islamabad.

He mentioned Azad Kashmir’s special status, pointing out that its affairs were managed with the grants of Pakistan’s federal government.

“The government will look after the police personnel who fell victims of the protests,” he added.

The Himalayan territory of Kashmir has been divided between India and Pakistan since their independence from Britain in 1947, with both countries ruling part of the territory but claiming it in full.

The western portion of the larger Kashmir region is administered by Pakistan as a nominally self-governing entity, while India rules the southern portion as a union territory.

While the Indian portion has faced an ongoing insurgency for decades and multiple armed attempts by the state to quell it, the Pakistani side has remained relatively calm over the decades, though it is also highly militarized.


Protesters call off march in Pakistan’s Azad Kashmir after demands met

Updated 14 May 2024
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Protesters call off march in Pakistan’s Azad Kashmir after demands met

  • March called off day after Pakistan’s PM Sharif approves $86 million grant to subsidize flour, electricity 
  • Clashes between protesters and police, which began last week, claimed lives of three civilians, one cop 

MUZAFFARABAD, Pakistan: An alliance of civil rights group on Tuesday called off a protest march in Pakistan-ruled Kashmir after several days of clashes over high prices in which four people have been killed and over 100 injured, officials said.

Protesters called off the march a day after Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif approved a grant of 24 billion rupees ($86 million) to help meet most of their demands, which included subsidies on flour and electricity prices.

The alliance’s head, Shaukat Nawaz Mir, announced the decision in Muzaffarabad, the capital city of the scenic Himalayan region.

“The government has accepted all of our demands,” he said, calling on protesters to return to their homes and businesses.

Mir also demanded the government give financial compensation for the families of three protesters and a police official who were killed in the violence.

The protesters were killed on Monday evening after paramilitary troops opened fire when they were attacked, said local government official Adnan Khurshid. The police official died in clashes over the weekend.

Kashmir’s Prime Minister Anwar-ul-Haq Chaudhry said late on Monday that the funds would help lower some prices in the region.

The subsidized rate for 40 kgs (88.2 lb) of flour will be 2,000 rupees, down from 3,100 rupees, he said. He also announced a substantial dip in the electricity prices.

The protests coincide with the visit of an International Monetary Fund mission to negotiate a new long-term loan with Islamabad.

The IMF has already warned that social tensions triggered by the high cost of living could weigh on policy implementation, adding that fiscal slippages could present a challenge for the government.


PM says Pakistan to privatize all state-owned entities except ‘strategically important’ ones

Updated 3 min 52 sec ago
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PM says Pakistan to privatize all state-owned entities except ‘strategically important’ ones

  • Finance Minister Aurangzeb last week said there is “no such thing as strategic” public entities
  • Privatization of debt-ridden state entities is major reform demanded by IMF as Pakistan negotiates new bailout

KARACHI: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif announced on Tuesday that his government would privatize all state-owned enterprises (SOEs) except for those deemed “strategically important” or essential ones, state-owned media reported, as Islamabad looks to overhaul its public entities to improve their performance.

The announcement is in direct conflict with Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb’s statement from Sunday in which he said that all public entities would be handed over to the private sector. The minister had said he and Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar were on the same page that “there is no such thing as a strategic SOE.” 

Former finance minister Dar had chaired a meeting of the Cabinet Committee on Privatization on May 10 in which he had said the government’s business would only be limited to essential or strategic SOEs. Dar said while priority would be accorded to loss-making entities, even SOEs who were earning profits would be considered for privatization.

PM Sharif chaired a high-level meeting on matters related to the Ministry of Privatization and Privatization Commission on Tuesday, the state-run Radio Pakistan reported.

“Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has announced to privatize all government-owned enterprises with the exception of strategically important state-owned enterprises,” Radio Pakistan said. “The Prime Minister directed all federal ministries to take necessary action in this regard and cooperate with the Privatization Commission.”

Pakistan’s Finance Division has defined strategic entities as those whose functions have significant strategic, security, or social importance in addition to economic values for the country. It has defined essential SOEs as those which are critical for the execution of government policies and where the private sector is unable to assume those functions due to various reasons. 

The Oil & Gas Development Limited (OGDCL), Pakistan State Oil (PSO), National Bank of Pakistan, and hydropower projects are considered strategically important enterprises owned by the government. However, the government has not classified strategic assets for privatization yet.

Pakistan agreed to overhaul its public entities under a $3 billion financial bailout agreement it signed with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) last year, a deal that helped it avert a sovereign debt default in 2023. The IMF has said Pakistan’s SOEs whose losses are burning a hole in government finances would need stronger governance. Pakistan is currently negotiating with the international lender for a larger, longer program for which it must implement an ambitious reforms agenda, including the privatization of debt-ridden SOEs.

Among the main entities Pakistan is pushing to privatize is its national flag carrier, the Pakistan International Airlines (PIA). The government is putting on the block a stake ranging from 51 percent to 100 percent.

Sharif instructed authorities to ensure transparency in the privatization process of all state-owned entities, including the PIA. 

“He directed to televise live Pakistan International Airlines Company Limited’s privatization including bidding and other important steps,” Radio Pakistan said. “The process of privatization of other institutions will also be broadcast live.”

The prime minister was informed that the pre-qualification process for PIA’s privatization would be completed by the end of May. He was told loss-making SOEs would be privatized on priority and that a “pre-qualified panel of experts” is being appointed in Pakistan’s Privatization Commission to speed up the process.

Separately, Aurangzeb chaired a meeting of the Cabinet Committee on State-Owned Enterprises on Monday which was attended by ministers of maritime affairs, economic affairs, housing and works, the governor of Pakistan’s central bank and other officials. The meeting was held to evaluate the performance of the country’s public entities and review the progress of the government’s privatization agenda.

Aurangzeb directed concerned ministries and divisions to submit proposals for the categorization of their respective public entities by May 20. The step is aimed at reviewing the rationale for retaining any commercial functions within the public sector, the finance ministry said.

“The objective is to retain only the essential functions within the public sector & to assign the remaining functions to the private sector,” it said. “At the same time the entities which remain in public sector have to be more competitive, accountable, and responsive to the needs of citizens.”

Participants agreed to foster transparency, efficiency, and sustainable growth within the SOEs, reflecting the government’s dedication to ensuring the optimal utilization of public resources, the ministry said.

Tahir Abbas, the head of research at Arif Habib Limited, considered Pakistan’s largest securities brokerage company, said the conflicting statements between Sharif and Aurangzeb showed lack of coordination between them. 

“There seems lack of coordination between them on the classification of assets for privatization,” he told Arab News. 


Pakistan face dangerous Ireland in T20I series decider today

Updated 14 May 2024
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Pakistan face dangerous Ireland in T20I series decider today

  • Buoyed by stellar performances from Rizwan, Fakhar Zaman, Pakistan beat Ireland on Sunday to level series 1-1
  • After Ireland series, Pakistan will head to England for four-match T20 series as preparation before T20 World Cup

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan will face a dangerous Ireland cricket team today, Tuesday, in the third and final T20 match of the series between the two teams in Dublin, as both sides look to gain momentum with less than a month to go before the World Cup kicks off in June. 

The visitors were shocked by minnows Ireland last week when they lost in the series opener on Friday. However, the South Asian country bounced back in the second T20I on Friday, beating Ireland by seven wickets in a match that saw stellar performances from Mohammad Rizwan, Fakhar Zaman, Shaheen Shah Afridi and a late blitz from Azam Khan. 

“The third and last T-20 between Pakistan and Ireland will be played at Dublin today,” state-run Radio Pakistan reported. “The match will start at 7:00 p.m. Pakistan Standard Time.”

Pakistan and Ireland are both in Group A of the upcoming ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2024 in the West Indies and the USA. They will face each other in the tournament on 16 June, Sunday, in Florida. Ireland have given Pakistan a tough time in the series, losing the second match after taking early breakthroughs and handing skipper Babar Azam’s side an impressive 194-run target. 

Pakistan’s bowling attack, considered its main strength which features the likes of Shaheen Shah Afridi, Naseem Shah and Mohammad Amir, has been in the spotlight for conceding too many runs and failing to trouble the Irish batters much. 

Separately, Cricket Ireland on Monday officially confirmed a first men’s tour of Pakistan in August and September in 2025. The series will see both countries play three T20Is and three ODIs against each other. It was part of the Future Tours Programme (FTP) of the ICC scheduled for September 2025.

The decision was finalized after Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) Chairman Mohsin Naqvi met Cricket Ireland Chairman Brain MacNeice. A statement released by the PCB, however, did not mention any dates and venues for the schedule of the series. It follows in the wake of Ireland Women touring Pakistan, who also played three ODIs and three T20Is in November 2022.

The Pakistan men’s team will head to England for a four-match T20I series after the third T20I against Ireland. Following the England series, with matches scheduled at Headingley (22 May), Birmingham (25 May), Cardiff (28 May), and The Oval, London (30 May), both England and Pakistan will head to the US for the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2024. 

England will face Scotland in Barbados on June 4 in their opening match, while Pakistan will launch their campaign against the United States (US) in Dallas on June 6. Pakistan will take on arch-rivals India on June 9 in New York which is set to be one of the most anticipated clashes of the T20 World Cup.

Squads:

Ireland: Paul Stirling (captain), Mark Adair, Ross Adair, Andrew Balbirnie, Curtis Campher, Gareth Delany, George Dockrell, Graham Hume, Barry McCarthy, Neil Rock, Harry Tector, Lorcan Tucker, Ben White, Craig Young

Pakistan: Babar Azam (captain), Abrar Ahmed, Azam Khan, Fakhar Zaman, Haris Rauf, Hasan Ali, Iftikhar Ahmed, Imad Wasim, Mohammad Abbas Afridi, Mohammad Amir (unavailable for first T20I), Mohammad Rizwan, Muhammad Irfan Khan, Naseem Shah, Saim Ayub, Salman Ali Agha, Shadab Khan, Shaheen Shah Afridi and Usman Khan