The Guardian Australia

Nawaz Sharif's party clinches victory in Pakistan local election

- Sune Engel Rasmussen in Islamabad

Pakistan’s ruling party has clinched a win in an unusually close race in a normally unassailab­le stronghold – an indication of damage to the reputation of Nawaz Sharif, the ex-prime minister recently ousted on corruption charges.

The local byelection on Sunday in Lahore was for a parliament­ary seat vacated by Sharif when he was disqualifi­ed in July pitted Sharif ’s wife, Kulsoom Nawaz, against 43 contenders, and saw a surge of radical Islamist candidates.

The runner-up, Yasmeen Rashid, a 66-year-old gynaecolog­ist, represente­d the party of opposition leader and former cricketer Imran Khan.

Few people had expected Rashid to upset Nawaz. The Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) has swept every election in the 321,786voter constituen­cy since Sharif first won the seat in 1985.

Yet on Sunday, the party’s nearly 40,000-vote majority from 2013 shrank to about 15,000,in a potential sign that the corruption scandal unleashed by the 2016 Panama Papers leak may have dented Sharif’s local standing.

According to officials, a 39% turnout – down from 52% in 2013 – gave Nawaz 61,745 votes against Rashid total of 47,099.

Hassan Askari Rizvi, a Lahorebase­d political analyst, said the result revealed reluctance among independen­t voters and those on the fence to turn out for the beleaguere­d Sharif.

“PML-N has not been able to convince voters that Sharif is innocent or a victim of a conspiracy, or that the court has done injustice to him,” Rizvi said.

The supreme court disqualifi­ed Sharif for “dishonesty” for failing to disclose a salary from a Dubai-based company he chaired.

Despite the party’s win, Rizwi said: “Now it is difficult to call Lahore a preserve of PML-N. Corruption charges have undermined Sharif and his party. For the time being, his fate is sealed and tied to corruption cases against him.”

However, for Imran Khan, the failure to beat Sharif at his lowest was not the leap towards prime ministersh­ip that he had hoped for.

Before the election, Safia Bibi Begum, a former PML-N supporter in her late 40s, told the Guardian she might vote for PTI instead. “The Panama Papers changed my mind about Nawaz. That is why I consider voting for Imran Khan,” she said.

The election was marred by complaints of the military banning observers from accessing polling stations.

Abdul Rashid, of the Free and Fair Election Network, said the army ousted observers from 20 polling stations during vote counting. At 11 stations, observers were barred from entering at all, he said.

The Guardian also spoke to more than a dozen journalist­s who were denied entry.

Lahore’s streets were buzzing with campaign rallies, but the winner was absent. Kulsoom Nawaz is undergoing hospital treatment in London, with her husband by her side.

For weeks, her daughter, Maryam Nawaz, canvassed on her behalf by pounding the pavement in defence of her father’s legacy. The victory, amid intense political pressure, could set her – widely seen as her father’s heir-apparent – on the path to party leadership.

Maryam said in her victory speech that voters had rejected “the conspiracy against democracy”. She claimed that dozens of PML-N campaign workers had gone missing in recent days.

“A systematic hate campaign was launched against us,” said Khawaja Saad Rafiq, a senior party leader, claiming that some PML-N supporters had been barred from voting.

Meanwhile, Rashid said she would challenge the result in court and complained that 29,000 additional voters had been registered without her party having access to the lists.

Maryam herself is under investigat­ion by an anti-corruption watchdog for her alleged involvemen­t in purchasing luxury apartments in London with offshore wealth.

Radical Islamists gained ground in the election. In third place, with 7,130 votes, came another fundamenta­list party, Tehreek-e Labaik Pakistan, which campaigned with slogans supporting Mumtaz Qadri, the man convicted of killing Punjab governor Salmaan Taseer for criticisin­g Pakistan’s blasphemy laws.

Even more brazen were the Milli Muslim League (MML), which came in fourth place. The newly formed

party is a thinly disguised front for Hafiz Muhammad Saeed, the leader of Lashkar-e-Taiba and a terrorist with a $10m bounty on his head who is accused of mastermind­ing the 2008 Mumbai attacks.

With nearly 6,000 votes, MML gained four times as many as the leftwing Pakistan People’s party.

The participat­ion of MML could test the Pakistani military’s resolve in countering the participat­ion of militant groups ahead of next year’s election.

 ??  ?? A woman casts a ballot during the byelection on a national assembly seat vacated following the disqualifi­cation of former prime minister Nawaz Sharif. Photograph: Rahat Dar/EPA
A woman casts a ballot during the byelection on a national assembly seat vacated following the disqualifi­cation of former prime minister Nawaz Sharif. Photograph: Rahat Dar/EPA
 ??  ?? Supporters of former Pakistani prime minister Nawaz Sharif party celebrate victory in byelection in Lahore. Photograph: Arif Ali/AFP/Getty Images
Supporters of former Pakistani prime minister Nawaz Sharif party celebrate victory in byelection in Lahore. Photograph: Arif Ali/AFP/Getty Images

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