US Congress calls for impartial probe into Pakistan’s elections following irregularity claims

The still image taken from the live stream of the US House of Representatives on June 26, 2024, shows the final results of the vote on a resolution calling for a "full and independent investigation of claims of interference or irregularities in Pakistan’s February 2024 election." (US House of Representatives)
Short Url
Updated 26 June 2024
Follow

US Congress calls for impartial probe into Pakistan’s elections following irregularity claims

  • The February 8 polls were marred by a nationwide mobile Internet shutdown, delayed results, leading to rigging allegations
  • US lawmakers voted 368-7 over resolution condemning attempts to suppress people’s participation in the democratic process

ISLAMABAD: The United States House of Representatives on Wednesday overwhelmingly voted in favor of an impartial investigation into the claims of election manipulation in Pakistan following the February 8 national polls, emphasizing the need for people’s participation in the democratic process in the South Asian country.

Pakistan’s last general polls were marred by a nationwide mobile Internet shutdown on election day, arrests and violence in its build-up and unusually delayed results, leading to accusations that the vote was rigged.

The issue was most forcefully raised by former Prime Minister Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI), whose leaders had to participate in the electoral contest as independent candidates after being deprived of their symbol, the cricket bat, following a legal battle over an intra-party election deemed flawed by the election authority.

Much of the PTI leadership, including Khan, found itself behind bars on a range of legal charges as the country went to the polls, though the candidates supported by it emerged as the single largest bloc in the National Assembly.

The US house voted 368-7 over a resolution calling for “full and independent investigation of claims of interference or irregularities in Pakistan’s February 2024 election.”

It condemned “attempts to suppress the people of Pakistan’s participation in their democracy, including through harassment, intimidation, violence, arbitrary detention, restrictions on access to the Internet and telecommunications, or any violation of their human, civil, or political rights.”

The House Resolution 901 said it was to express support for democracy and human rights in Pakistan.

It urged the government to uphold democratic and electoral institutions, human rights, and the rule of law, asking it to respect the fundamental guarantees of due process, freedom of the press, freedom of assembly, and speech of the people of Pakistan.

It also condemned “any effort to subvert the political, electoral, or judicial processes of Pakistan.”

Commenting on the development, Michael Kugelman, Director of South Asia Institute at The Wilson Center in Washington, said the margin of vote was significant.

“85 percent of House members voted on it, and 98 percent voted in favor of the resolution,” he noted in a social media post. “This is quite significant.”


’I will go’: Bengalis in Pakistan hope for family reunions

Updated 6 sec ago
Follow

’I will go’: Bengalis in Pakistan hope for family reunions

  • Direct flights between Pakistan and Bangladesh, one nation until 1971m finally resumed last month after 14-year pause
  • Over a million Bengalis now live in Pakistan, many of whom arrived during 1971 war when Bangladesh seceded

KARACHI: Shah Alam traveled from his home in Bangladesh to Pakistan for a brief visit nearly three decades ago, but flaring hostility between the two countries and financial woes left him stranded in the megacity of Karachi.

Now the 60-year-old, who makes a modest living selling dried seafood, is determined to return to his birthplace, having already missed the deaths of his parents and first wife in Bangladesh.

Direct flights between Pakistan and Bangladesh — one nation until 1971 — finally resumed last month after a 14-year pause, reflecting a warming of once-frosty ties since a Bangladeshi student-led uprising ushered in new leadership in 2024.

Shah Alam has already started planning his trip to be reunited with remaining family.

“I will go,” he told AFP with teary eyes.

“I am facing some financial issues but will certainly go with my son after Eid Al-Adha,” referring to the Muslim holiday expected in late May.

Shah Alam, who married again in Pakistan, still owns agricultural land and his family home in Bangladesh.

“Everything is there. I was stuck here,” he told AFP in Karachi, near the well-known Bengali market where he peddles desiccated fish and prawns to make ends meet for $7 to $9 per day.

“I wanted to go back, but there was no way. The relationship (between Pakistan and Bangladesh) was not good. I had no money as well to go back home.”

“Now, I want to see my elder brother and my married daughter who live in Bangladesh.”

BITTER CIVIL WAR

Bangladesh and Pakistan, which are geographically divided by about 1,500 kilometers (930 miles) of Indian territory, split after a bitter war in 1971.

Hundreds of thousands were killed in the conflict — Bangladeshi estimates say millions — and Pakistan’s military was accused of widespread atrocities.

There are estimated to be over a million ethnic Bengalis now living in Pakistan, many of whom arrived during the war, after which East Pakistan declared independence and became Bangladesh.

The vast majority of Bangladesh’s population of 170 million people identify as belonging to the ethnic and linguistic group, and tens of millions more Bengalis live across South Asia, mostly in neighboring India.

Bengalis have long complained that Pakistan, where they are a small minority, has never accepted them as citizens and that they lack access to education, business opportunities and the property market.

Hussain Ahmed, 20, whose family lives in Machhar Colony, one of Karachi’s largest slum areas where most of the population is comprised of Bengalis, does not have Pakistani nationality or an identity card.

“How can I go (to Bangladesh)? I want to go there,” the fish factory worker told AFP. “Even my father doesn’t have an identity card. How can I get it then?“

Karachi has several Bengali neighborhoods, mainly slums, which residents say have housed Bengalis since before East Pakistan became Bangladesh.

Most Bengalis rarely venture outside their home areas owing to fear of being interrogated by law enforcement agencies to prove their “identities” as Pakistani citizens.

“I am a Pakistani, but I don’t have my identity card,” another 22-year-old Bengali, Ahmed, told AFP.

Ahmed says he has the required documents, but cannot prove that his family was living in what is now Pakistan before 1971.

“They declare me a Bangladeshi, but I am a Pakistani,” he said.

Like many others, Ahmed’s relatives live in Bangladesh, but he and his family have never had the chance to see them as they remain stateless.

“We have our relatives there, but the (Pakistan) government doesn’t recognize us.”

’CORDIAL RELATONSHIP’

Last August, Pakistan’s Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar visited Dhaka and met with Bangladesh’s Chief Adviser Muhammad Yunus in the first Pakistani government visit to Dhaka since 2012, with Islamabad calling it a “significant milestone.”

Yunus vowed to warm strained ties with Islamabad after he took the helm of Bangladesh’s government in a temporary capacity following the 2024 overthrow of former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina who fled to her long-time ally India — Pakistan’s arch-rival.

The diplomatic thaw is widely expected to continue under Bangladesh’s newly elected Prime Minister Tarique Rahman, who took office this month.

Local politician Muhammad Rafiqul Hussain, who was born in Karachi, told AFP that Bengalis like him live across Pakistan and contribute to the economy like other Pakistanis.

He is one of the seven elected leaders from the Bengali community in Karachi’s municipal government.

“This is our fourth generation in Pakistan,” he said, adding there are more than 106 Bengali neighborhoods in Karachi, Pakistan’s largest city which is known as a multicultural melting pot.

For Hussain, the “cordial relationship” between Pakistan and Bangladesh has made a big difference for Pakistani Bengalis.

“Everyone is happy. It will boost both countries’ economies. It will encourage brotherhood like we had in the past.”

However, community activist and lawyer Hafiz Zainulabdin Shah said Bengalis living in Pakistan have lost some of their identity by adopting local languages.

“Bengalis who live in Karachi mostly speak Urdu,” he said, adding: “We don’t have our own culture now.”

But despite Pakistan-based Bengalis living “with a sense of deprivation,” Shah said “they feel content with the newly developed relationship between the two countries.”

“It should continue forever,” he said.