Pakistani leader defends slow vote reporting, notes previous 66-hour tabulation times
Caretaker Pakistani Prime Minister Anwaar-ul-Haq Kakar defended his country's controversial delay in the revelation of last week's election results.
Pakistan's caretaker prime minister on Monday defended the widely criticized delay in announcing the results of last week's parliamentary election, saying authorities took only 36 hours to count over 60 million votes while grappling with militant attacks.
Anwaar-ul-Haq Kakar pointed out that election results had been announced after 66 hours when Imran Khan won power in 2018. He insisted that a "level playing field" was available to all political parties, including that of the imprisoned former prime minister.
Khan's party, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf, won more seats than any other, but only because its candidates ran as independents after the party was expelled from the vote. The candidates won 93 out of 265 National Assembly seats, not enough to form a government. Khan could not run because of criminal convictions that he calls politically motivated.
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The Pakistan Muslim League-N party, led by three-time premier and ex-felon Nawaz Sharif, secured 75 seats. The Pakistan People’s Party, or PPP, led by Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari, came in third with 54 seats.
The two parties, which led the campaign to kick Khan out of office in 2022, were in talks to form a coalition government.
Thursday's vote was overshadowed by allegations of vote-rigging and an unprecedented mobile phone shutdown. The Election Commission denied the allegations of rigging.
Kakar told a news conference that mobile phone service was suspended on election day for security reasons following a pair of militant attacks that killed 30 people in southwestern Baluchistan province a day before the vote. He said that security forces last week killed a key militant from the Islamic State group who was behind the elections-related attacks.
He said he could afford a delay in announcing results "but not the terrorism or the terrorist attacks."
Kakar said the elections were largely peaceful, free and fair, and the process to install a new government could begin in the next eight or nine days, when the newly elected National Assembly is expected to convene. He said the parliament will elect the speaker, deputy speaker and new prime minister.
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Kakar said people were allowed to hold peaceful protests but warned that action would be taken if rallies turned violent.
On Monday, thousands of supporters of Khan and members of other political parties blocked key highways and held a daylong strike in the volatile southwest to protest alleged vote-rigging. Separately, several nationalist and Islamist political parties in Baluchistan blocked two highways leading to Iranian and Afghan border crossings.
Jan Achakzai, a government spokesman in Baluchistan, urged protesters to "show grace" by accepting defeat and moving away from the highways.
Khan's party and others refused to accept their defeat in dozens of constituencies. Dozens of Khan’s supporters were briefly detained in the eastern city of Lahore over the weekend while protesting alleged election irregularities.
Pakistan’s military has always cast itself as the ultimate arbiter of who becomes prime minister. Sharif was marked out as the security establishment’s preferred candidate because of his smooth return to the country in October.
Sharif spent four years in exile to avoid serving prison sentences, but his convictions were overturned within weeks of his arrival in Pakistan.