Scrutiny of nominations for Pakistan Senate polls to be held on March 19

In this file photo, Pakistani media personnel gather outside the Parliament building during a joint session in Islamabad on February 28, 2019. (AFP/File)
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Updated 17 March 2024
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Scrutiny of nominations for Pakistan Senate polls to be held on March 19

  • A revised list of candidates will be issued on the 26th of March
  • Polling for 48 vacant seats in the Senate will be held on April 2

ISLAMABAD: The scrutiny of nomination papers filed for elections for the Senate, the upper house of Pakistan parliament, will be held on March 19, Pakistani state media reported on Sunday, a day after the expiry of a deadline to submit candidatures.

Elected for a term of six years, Pakistani senators discuss laws and vote on them like other public representatives. However, half of the senators retire every three years and new ones are elected to replace them.

Members of the four provincial assemblies will elect senators for seven general seats, two women seats, and two seats for technocrats, including ulema, from each province as well as one seat for non-Muslims from both Punjab and Sindh provinces. 

In the federal capital, members of the National Assembly will elect members of the Senate on one general seat and one seat for technocrats, including religious scholars. According to the schedule, polling will be held on April 2.

“The scrutiny of nomination papers for elections on forty-eight vacant seats of the Senate will be carried out on Tuesday [March 19],” the state-run Radio Pakistan broadcaster reported.

“Revised list of the candidates will be issued on the 26th of this month whilst the candidates can withdraw their nomination papers by 27th of this month.”

Pakistan’s Senate consists of 100 members, of which 52 retired this month. Senate elections will now be held for 48 seats as four of them reserved for erstwhile federally administered tribal areas have already been abolished after their merger with the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.

Those who have submitted nominations on behalf of the ruling Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) include former caretaker prime minister Anwaar-ul-Haq Kakar, Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi, Finance Minister Aurangzeb Khan, Ahad Cheema and Mustafa Ramday.

Jailed former prime minister Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party has issued tickets to Murad Saeed, Faisal Javed Khan, Mirza Afridi, Irfan Saleem and ⁠Khurram Zeeshan.

The Pakistan Peoples Party, which is also part of the ruling coalition at center, has filed nomination papers of nine candidates for general seats, three each for women and technocrats, and two for minorities.

Sindh Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah told reporters on Saturday the PPP would release a final list of its candidates after the scrutiny of nomination papers.


UNGA adopts Pakistan-sponsored resolution focusing world attention on Palestine, Kashmir

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UNGA adopts Pakistan-sponsored resolution focusing world attention on Palestine, Kashmir

  • The resolution calls on countries to immediately cease foreign military intervention in and occupation of foreign countries and territories
  • Islamabad says the resolution reinforces international attention to the legitimate causes and aspirations of Palestinian, Kashmiri peoples

ISLAMABAD: The United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) has adopted a Pakistan-sponsored resolution on the peoples’ right to self-determination, Pakistan’s UN mission said on Friday, saying it reinforces the world attention to the Palestine and Kashmir issues.

The text, which was adopted by consensus, was recommended last month by the 193-member General Assembly’s Third Committee, which deals with social, humanitarian and cultural issues, according to Pakistani state media.

Co-sponsored by 65 countries, it called on countries to immediately cease foreign military intervention in and occupation of foreign countries and territories as well as acts of “repression, discrimination, and maltreatment.”

The resolution also declared the General Assembly’s firm opposition to acts of foreign military intervention, aggression and occupation, which have resulted in suppression of peoples’ right to self-determination in parts of the world.

“The consensual adoption of the resolution manifests broad international support for the inalienable right of the peoples facing colonialism, alien domination and foreign occupation,” Pakistan’s UN mission said on X. 

“For the people of Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IIOJK) and Palestine, the resolution reinforces international attention to their just and legitimate cause and their aspirations for freedom and dignity in accordance with UN Security Council resolutions.”

Pakistan, which does not recognize Israel, supports an independent Palestinian state based on “internationally agreed parameters” and pre-1967 borders, calling for an end to Israeli occupation of the Gaza Strip and the West Bank, including East Jerusalem.

Kashmir, on the other hand, has been divided between Pakistan and India since their independence from British rule in 1947. Both countries claim the Himalayan territory in its entirety but rule it in part and have fought multiple wars over it.

Islamabad has repeatedly urged New Delhi to hold a plebiscite in the disputed territory in line with the United Nations Security Council resolutions.

Ambassador Usman Jadoon, Pakistan’s deputy permanent representative to the UN, this week said the realization of self-determination is not merely a historical aspiration, but an enduring obligation.

“Recent developments in the Middle East demonstrate that lasting peace cannot be achieved through the continued denial and suppression of the legitimate right to self-determination of the Palestinian people,” he said on Thursday.

“Similarly, the UN Security Council has, through several resolutions, recognized the legitimate right of self-determination of the people of Jammu and Kashmir. A just resolution of the Jammu and Kashmir dispute remains central to the establishment of durable peace in South Asia.”