ISLAMABAD, Pakistan
Pakistan is on edge as the South Asian nation heads to the polls Thursday for a widely anticipated general election in which its charismatic – and widely popular – former leader is barred from standing.
Imran Khan, 71, is a former
international cricket star who rose to Pakistan’s highest political office
before he was ousted from power in a storm of controversy.
Now the former prime minister
is imprisoned on multiple convictions and banned from contesting the vote
against his rivals – scions of the country’s elite political dynasties.
The vote, delayed by a year,
comes as nuclear-armed Pakistan faces mounting challenges – from economic
uncertainty and frequent militant attacks to climate catastrophes that are
putting millions at risk.
That sets the stage for a
difficult road to recovery for whoever wins in a nation where no democratically
elected prime minister has ever completed a full term in office.
Two blasts in separate
locations in the southwestern province of Balochistan on Wednesday, a region
plagued by decades of insurgency, killed at least 30 people and injured 40
more, underscoring how political violence has spiked ahead of the vote.
The clear frontrunner in
campaigning is Khan’s longtime foe, Nawaz Sharif.
The 74-year-old former prime
minister is seeking a historic fourth term as leader in what would be a
remarkable political comeback following years of self-exile overseas after he
was sentenced to prison on corruption charges.
Veteran Sharif will face a
strong challenge, however, from first-time candidate for Prime Minister,
Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, 35, son of slain former leader Benazir Bhutto.
Confronted with increasing
economic hardship and frequent terror attacks, analysts are questioning the
credibility of the vote, accusing authorities of “pre-poll rigging” owing to a
widespread crackdown on Khan – arguably the country’s most popular politician –
and his aides.
Both the military and
Pakistan’s caretaker government have denied suppressing Khan or the PTI.
However, in place of the usual
campaigning fanfare that accompanies an election cycle, there is a sense of
desolation among many of the country’s 230 million population, nearly 40% of
whom are living in poverty, according to the World Bank.
Many young voters – the median
age in Pakistan is just 22.7 – say they feel unseen and unheard, unable to pick
the leader they want to guide the country for the next five years.
“Everyone can see where the
preference lies. I wanted to give my first vote to Imran Khan but
unfortunately, I don’t think that can happen now,” said Rabiya Arooj, a
22-year-old first-time voter from the capital, Islamabad.
“Our institutions are not
working, the people responsible are not working for us, there is no freedom of
speech. We are very distressed.”
Khan’s embattled Pakistan
Tehreek-e-Insaaf party (PTI) has vowed to fight on in the polls, despite his
absence from the ballot as he serves lengthy prison sentences for corruption,
revealing state secrets and fraudulent marriage. Khan’s wife, Bushra Bibi, has
also been jailed.
Khan, who captained Pakistan
to cricket World Cup glory in 1992 and entered politics four years later, rose
to power on a ticket of anti-corruption.
His party won elections in
2018, which many analysts say came with the approval of the country’s powerful
military, a force that has dominated politics since Pakistan’s 1947
independence either through direct rule or behind the scenes.
Khan encountered multiple
hurdles during his tenure as leader.
From rising inflation to the
Covid-19 pandemic, his government grappled with record slumps in foreign
exchange, pushing the nation to the brink of economic collapse.
He was also accused of passing
legislation against freedom of expression, with numerous journalists and
activists critical of his establishment jailed on various charges.
Khan has also been embroiled
in political controversy since he was dramatically ousted in a parliamentary
no-confidence vote in April 2022, for alleged mismanagement of the economy.
That moment set the stage for
a months-long showdown between Khan and the military, who he accused of
orchestrating his removal, prompting tens of thousands of his supporters to
throng the streets in defiance of the army. The military denies Khan’s accusations.
Khan maintains widespread
popularity among Pakistan’s largely young voters, who view him as a break from
the political dynasties or military establishments that ruled the country for
much of its independent history.
“Pakistan has had polls of
dubious credibility in the past. This time around they are particularly
significant,” said Farzana Shaikh, associate fellow at the Asia-Pacific program
at The Royal Institute of International Affairs.
“Not only because of the scale
of repression but because the scale of the so-called ‘pre-poll rigging’ has
rarely been matched in the past.”
Pakistan’s Caretaker
Information Minister, Murtaza Solangi, said the upcoming poll will be conducted
democratically, adding “ample resources are in place to ensure free and fair
elections.”
The PTI has been prohibited
from using its famous cricket bat symbol on ballots, dealing a blow to millions
of illiterate people who might use it to cast their vote, and television
stations are banned from running Khan’s speeches.
In the capital, the lackluster
feeling around the election is tangible. Dozens of residents CNN spoke with
blamed “the establishment” – local code for the military – for what they said
was a crackdown on Khan’s party.
“We want Khan because he’s
someone who can represent us and speak openly around the world,” said student
Raja Ikram, 22, adding the only issue his generation cares about is Khan’s
release from prison.
“We don’t want a sellout prime
minister,” he said.
Some 370 kilometers south, in
Khan’s hometown of Lahore, many young voters responded with equal
disillusionment.
First-time voter Ameer Hamza,
22, said “there is not much excitement” for the upcoming vote. “People believe
the election is always fixed,” the student said.
Manahil Ahmed, 23, called
Pakistan’s political environment “particularly hostile” right now. “We are
looking for basic rights of expression, dignity to life, right to free speech,”
she said, adding she doesn’t relate to the “elitist and dynastic” candidates
standing for prime minister.
Insurgencies and militancy
have plagued Pakistan but a steady drip of attacks recently has been especially
grim, even if they have tended not to generate international news headlines.
For Pakistan’s military and
police forces, the last year was the bloodiest in a decade.
On Monday, for example, 10
police officers were killed in an hours-long battle with gunmen in northwest
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province in the kind of ambush that has become a regular
occurrence for security forces.
Nearly 1,000 people were
killed in terrorist attacks across the country in 2023, according to the
Islamabad-based independent Center for Research and Security Studies.
Pakistan has had fraught
relations with its historically hostile neighbor, India, to the east and the
Taliban-led Afghanistan to the west.
Compounding this were deadly
airstrikes exchanged between Pakistan and Iran in January, leading to concerns
that a steady hand is needed to ensure Pakistan’s internal problems don’t spill
beyond borders in a simmering neighborhood.
“The first challenge for any
elected party will be how to form the government that would give it stability
to form a national consensus to solve Pakistan’s problems,” said Shaikh, the
analyst.
Violence has broken out in
several districts in the run-up to the election.
Last week, an independent
candidate affiliated with Khan’s party was shot in a “targeted killing” in
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, according to police.
Islamic State Khorasan, or
ISIS-K, claimed responsibility for the attack, which also injured three others.
Meanwhile, four people were
killed and five others wounded in a blast during a PTI campaign rally in
restive Balochistan province, according to Khan’s party. No group has yet
claimed responsibility for that attack.
Also in Balochistan, the homes
and offices of several candidates from the Pakistan’s People’s Party and the
election office of the Pakistan Muslim League-N were attacked, injuring at
least 15 people, according to authorities.
At least one of the attacks
was claimed by the Baloch Liberation Army, a militant separatist group.
“The environment leading up to
the elections is volatile, deeply polarizing and distrustful against the state
and its key institutions,” said Hussain Nadim, Maurice R. Greenberg World
Fellow at Yale University.
Distrust of state institutions
could “potentially lead to catastrophic results in the country where the
Pakistan Army – in its pursuit to ‘manage’ the elections has pushed the
political space into a tailspin,” he said.
“In short, the election
environment is delicate and inches away from an implosion.”
Three-time Prime Minister
Sharif, who once saw one of his terms ended in a military coup is widely
expected to win the election, given his Pakistan Muslim League-N (PMLN) party’s
popularity in the electorally significant Punjab province, where it is known
for its mega infrastructure projects.
The former fugitive returned
to Pakistan last October following nearly four years in self-exile, in a move
welcomed by many in his home province.
In the years running up to his
return Sharif got most of his convictions overturned in the courts, with the
final graft charge vacated in December, paving the way for him to stand for
election once more.
Shoaib Tanveer, 39, said he
was voting for the PMLN because of the facilities they have provided for
Punjab’s residents.
“They’ve sorted out sewage and
gas lines, they’ve cleaned up our streets, fixed streetlights, there has always
been a representative of theirs available to get work done and completed,” the
Punjab resident said.
Another voter, Baou Nadeem,
50, said the PMLN “represents progress and success.”
Shaikh, the analyst, said a
path had been cleared for Sharif to return to the top job.
“Perhaps rightly or wrongly
the leader of the PMLN is being groomed to take over and assume the role of PM
once the playing field has been cleared for him,” she said.
And some believe Sharif might
be what Pakistan needs during such a turbulent period.
“Sharif is a veteran. He’s
always been adept at balancing United States and China very well. He’ll want
good relations with India,” said Tim Willasey-Wilsey, a former senior British
diplomat and professor at King’s College London.
But the likelihood of a PLMN
victory could see an “an abysmally low” election turnout, analysts said.
“I don’t see vast numbers and
masses of Pakistanis coming out to protest the results,” Shaikh said, adding
that despite this, “people are desperate for normalization.”
“However disgruntled the
Pakistani public might be, (they are) also desperate for some stability after
months of chaos,” she said.
“So out of resignation they
will accept the results.”
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