Pakistan’s ruling coalition wins Senate polls — unofficial results

A general view of the Pakistan's Parliament House in Islamabad on March 9, 2024. (AFP/File)
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Updated 02 April 2024
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Pakistan’s ruling coalition wins Senate polls — unofficial results

  • The vote in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa assembly was postponed due to delay in reserved seats for women, minorities being appointed
  • The PPP party, the second-largest coalition partner, is expected to appoint the leader of the Senate, after securing the most seats

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s ruling coalition seized a majority in Senate polls on Tuesday, unofficial results showed, after the election commission delayed the vote in a province controlled by loyalists of jailed ex-premier Imran Khan.

Polls for half the Senate’s 96 seats are held every three years, elected by lawmakers from Pakistan’s four provincial assemblies and the lower house of parliament.

Early results returned by provincial election commissions showed the ruling coalition had taken most of the seats that were up for grabs.

Eighteen senators from Punjab and Balochistan stood unopposed.

The results will be confirmed by the central election commission in the coming days.

The Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP), the second-largest coalition partner, are expected to appoint the leader of the Senate, after securing the most seats.

So far they have not played a major role in the government, led by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and his Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz party, taking only the presidential role for party patriarch Asif Ali Zardari, the widower of assassinated premier Benazir Bhutto.

The vote in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Provincial Assembly was postponed due to a delay in reserved seats for women and religious minorities being appointed, the election commission said.

“The Constitution has been violated multiple times in this country,” chief minister of the province Ali Amin Gandapur told media.

“I want to make it clear that in this province we will fight, like our leader.”

Khan has been jailed since August in a series of cases he claims were designed to stop him from contesting February’s national elections, which were marred by vote-rigging allegations.

Candidates from Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party were forced to run as independents, blocked from campaigning and subject to online and media censorship.

Despite the crackdown, they won the most seats but were kept from power by a coalition of rival parties that had the backing of the military.

They had also been expected to retain the most seats in the Senate, until the vote was delayed in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.

Khan and his wife Bushra Bibi on Monday had 14-year prison terms for graft suspended by Islamabad High Court, with an appeal against the conviction still pending.

Khan, 71, remains jailed on two other cases including for treason and illegal marriage to Bibi, with sentences stretching up to a decade.

Bibi, also jailed over the marriage which the courts said broke Islamic law for happening to quickly after a divorce, is being detained at home.

On Tuesday, a court official who asked not to be named, said they were called to Islamabad High Court to investigate “threatening letters” delivered to all eight judges.

The high court judges last week accused the nation’s intelligence agency of intimidating and coercing them over “politically consequential” cases in a letter sent to the Supreme Judicial Council watchdog.


Pakistan, Algeria discuss investment cooperation in energy, mining, digital sectors

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Pakistan, Algeria discuss investment cooperation in energy, mining, digital sectors

  • MoU planned between Algerian investment agency and Pakistan’s SIFC
  • Talks also cover digital governance and smart agriculture collaboration

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan and Algeria have agreed to pursue closer investment cooperation in energy, mining and digital development, Pakistan’s Special Investment Facilitation Council (SIFC) said on Friday, as Islamabad steps up efforts to attract foreign capital and expand international collaborations.

The SIFC is a hybrid civil-military body formed in 2023 to fast-track decisions related to international investment in sectors including tourism, livestock, agriculture and mines and minerals. It has been central to Pakistan’s efforts to attract foreign investment and streamline regulatory approvals amid recurring balance-of-payments pressures.

Federal Secretary SIFC Jamil Qureshi said in a social media post that he met Algeria’s Ambassador to Pakistan, Dr. Brahim Romani, and discussed signing a memorandum of understanding to strengthen institutional collaboration between the Algerian Investment Promotion Agency and the SIFC.

“Both countries share strong potential to expand cooperation in strategic sectors such as energy, mining, digital transformation, and industrial development,” he said.

“Algeria’s experience in leveraging natural resources through institutions like Sonatrach, developing large-scale mining projects, and promoting industrial localization through partnerships with global firms such as Stellantis offers valuable lessons for Pakistan as we advance priority initiatives including Reko Diq, renewable energy expansion, and EV manufacturing,” he continued.

Qureshi said the two sides also explored collaboration in digital governance and smart agriculture, similar to Algeria’s satellite-driven agricultural and climate monitoring initiatives.

Islamabad has in recent months intensified outreach to Middle Eastern, Central Asian and African partners as it seeks long-term investment rather than short-term financial support.

Pakistan’s economy has stabilized under an International Monetary Fund program, with the government actively seeking foreign investment and collaborations to boost growth, improve exports and ease pressure on foreign exchange reserves.

“We look forward to translating this shared vision into concrete projects that generate jobs, enhance exports, and strengthen Pakistan–Algeria economic partnership,” Qureshi added.

Qureshi did not provide a timeline for signing the proposed memorandum of understanding.