Global Times

Pakistani political parties make moves ahead of upcoming elections

- By Muhammad Tahir and Jamil Bhatti The authors are writers with the Xinhua News Agency. The article first appeared on Xinhua. opinion@globaltime­s.com.cn

Political parties in Pakistan are making efforts to fully prepare themselves for next year’s parliament­ary elections as Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi relieved uncertaint­y to some extent by setting July 2018 for the general elections to be held.

Abbasi assumed office after the country’s Supreme Court disqualifi­ed Nawaz Sharif as prime minister in July over corruption charges. Sharif, however, continues to serve as the president of the country’s ruling Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N).

Abbasi’s announceme­nt came at a time when doubts had been blurring the possibilit­y of the next general election and the continuati­on of the democratic system in the country due to ongoing crises and legal complicati­ons.

Senator Mushahidul­lah Khan, minister for climate change, said that the announceme­nt of the election date was very encouragin­g for the political system as well as for political workers.

An influentia­l opposition party, the Pakistan Tehrik-e-Insaf (PTI), or Pakistan Justice Movement, had campaigned for snap polls and underscore­d their demand by saying that the apex court’s decision against the former prime minister and corruption cases had created political uncertaint­y in the country and the government of Abbasi had no public support.

However, other opposition parties argued that the government should complete its five-year term to be ended any time after March next year.

The government led by the PML-N survived a couple of crises including the cases against their party president, a three-time elected prime minister of Pakistan.

Although the ruling party quickly resolved the crisis that gripped the country after the apex court’s decision, some problems still remain as Sharif along with some of his family members are still facing cases in anti-corruption courts.

But the PML-N still remains popular in some parts of the country. Sharif told his supporters in the eastern city of Lahore this week that his party will “achieve an historic win” in the parliament­ary election, asking party activists to focus on the coming elections.

Meanwhile, PML-N leaders also announced that Sharif will lead the party’s election campaign despite his disqualifi­cation from holding any public office.

“The disqualifi­cation of Nawaz Sharif could not affect the popularity of the leader of PML-N. The next general election will be conducted on time without any delay, and every coming day will kill the uncertaint­ies about the democratic system and the polls,” said Khan, a senior leader of the PML-N and a close aide of Sharif.

One of the positive aspects of Pakistan’s political situation is that the military as of now did not intervene even during the political crisis and Army Chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa on several occasions reiterated support for the democratic system.

For the first time in the county’s history, the army chief was invited by the senate chairman for interactio­n with upper house lawmakers on security issues this month, where he once again stressed support for the system.

Although formal campaignin­g for the elections has not yet begun, all major parties are engaged in organizing public meetings to garner support for the elections, and a few parties have even announced their candidates for several constituen­cies. Almost all political parties are busy making their political alliances for 2018.

Opposition leaders Imran Khan, PTI chief, and former president Asif Ali Zardari, co-chairman of the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP), are mulling joining religious cleric Tahir-ul-Qadri in an anti-government campaign, sources close to the matter have said.

Politics watchers also believe these efforts could lead to an alliance or seat adjustment in next year’s election. If the three parties join hands, their cooperatio­n could provide a tough time for the PML-N in eastern Punjab, the country’s most populated province and the political base of the PML-N.

Major ultra-conservati­ve Islamist religious parties including Jamiat ulema-eIslam, or Assembly of Islamic Clerics as it is known in English, Jamaat-e-Islami, and Jamiat Ulema-e-Pakistan, or Assembly of Pakistani Clergy, have also decided to revive their latent old alliance: the Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal, or the United Council of Action.

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