Ex-PM Khan party demands EU make report on Pakistan national election public

Leaders of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party Raoof Hasan along with Ahmad Awais (L) speaks during a press conference in Islamabad on February 6, 2024. (AFP/File)
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Updated 25 March 2024
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Ex-PM Khan party demands EU make report on Pakistan national election public

  • Pakistan’s national election on Feb. 8 was marred by a mobile network shutdown, allegations of vote-rigging
  • Khan’s party urges release of ‘extremely critical’ EU report for better conduct of future elections in Pakistan

ISLAMABAD: Former prime minister Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) on Monday demanded the European Union (EU) make its report on last month’s Pakistan national election public, calling it a right of the people of the South Asian country.

Several poll observer groups, including delegations from the EU and Commonwealth, arrived in Pakistan to observe the national election held on February 8.

The election was marred by a mobile network shutdown and delays in release of results, and led to allegations of vote-rigging, mainly by Khan’s PTI party.

Speaking at a press conference in Islamabad, PTI spokesperson Raoof Hasan said the EU report, which had been handed over to the government via the election commission, was “extremely critical.”

“We demand European Union make this report public for better conduct of election [in Pakistan] in the future,” he said. “This is a right of the people of Pakistan and they should know how election was conducted in this country.”

Hasan claimed the EU report was a compilation of “pre-poll rigging, polling-day rigging and post-poll rigging.”

The development comes weeks after Peter Stano, the EU lead spokesperson for foreign affairs and security policy, lamented a “lack of a level playing field due to the inability of some political actors to contest the elections, restrictions to freedom of assembly, freedom of expression both online and offline, restrictions of access to the Internet, as well as allegations of severe interference in the electoral process, including arrests of political activists” in Pakistan.

The EU official had called upon Pakistani authorities to ensure a timely and full investigation of all reported election irregularities and to implement the recommendations of the Election Expert Mission report.

Ahead of the polls, Khan’s PTI had been severely hamstrung, with rallies banned, its party symbol taken away, and dozens of its candidates rejected from eligibility to stand.

Khan, who has been in jail since August last year, accuses Pakistan’s powerful military of sidelining him and his party from politics. The military denies Khan’s accusations and says it does not interfere in political matters.


Suicide bomber among five militants killed in counterterror operation in southwest Pakistan— military 

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Suicide bomber among five militants killed in counterterror operation in southwest Pakistan— military 

  • Security forces gunned down “Indian-sponsored” Pakistani Taliban militants in Pishin district on Sunday, says military 
  • Says Pakistani forces recovered weapons, explosives from slain militants who were involved in “terrorist activities“

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani security forces this week killed five militants, including a suicide bomber, during an intelligence-based operation in the country’s southwestern Balochistan province, the military’s media wing said on Monday. 

The operation took place in Balochistan’s Pishin district on Sunday after security forces received reports of the presence of “Fitna Al Khwarij,” a term the military uses to describe the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) militant group. Pakistani forces engaged the militants with multiple weapons, the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) added, as both sides traded fire. 

“After an intense fire exchange, suicide bomber kharji cowardly blew himself up and four other Indian-sponsored khwarij were hunted down and sent to hell,” the military’s media wing said. 

Pakistani forces recovered weapons, ammunition and explosives from the slain militants, the military said, adding that they were involved in numerous “terrorist activities” in the area. 

The military said it was carrying out sanitization operations to hunt any other militants in the area. It vowed to continue the government’s counterterrorism campaign to wipe out “foreign sponsored and supported terrorism” from Pakistan. 

The TTP has carried out some of the deadliest attacks against civilians and law enforcement agencies in Pakistan since 2007 in its bid to impose its own brand of Islamic law in the country.

Pakistan says TTP, Daesh and ethnic Baloch separatist outfits enjoy sanctuary in Afghanistan from where they launch attacks against its territory. Afghanistan denies the allegations and calls on Islamabad to address its security challenges without involving Kabul.

Pakistan carried out intelligence-based strikes on alleged militant camps and hideouts in Afghanistan’s Nangarhar, Paktika and Khost provinces on Saturday, a security official said. The official said more than 80 militants were killed in the attacks, a claim denied by the Afghan Taliban who said Islamabad killed and wounded dozens of civilians in the strikes.

The strikes have increased tensions between the neighbors, with Afghanistan warning it will retaliate at a “suitable time.”

Islamabad also accuses India of arming and funding militant groups that carry out attacks in Pakistan, a charge New Delhi rejects.