Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Imran emerges frontrunne­r in Pakistan polls overseen by army

Voting starts after one of the most chaotic, dangerous and distastefu­l campaigns

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parts of the country but still thousands attended massive rallies, corner meetings and candidates visited their constituen­cies to woo voters.

Imran Khan’s prospects are bright. Former prime minister Nawaz Sharif has seen a dip in his popularity but his younger brother Shehbaz Sharif seems to retain a hold over his voters. Bilawal Bhutto, who did some extensive campaignin­g, isn’t being seen as a serious contender because his party is in disarray.

In his final campaign speech, Imran Khan talked about corruption, and, possibly for the first time, of India. He told his audience, “I want peace in Kashmir and the Indians should listen to the will of the people of Kashmir, adding “India is afraid of me and they know that I will not betray my country.”

He said he was not against friendship with India but it will not be acceptable at the expense of the Kashmir cause.

He also came down hard on Nawaz Sharif for disclosing informatio­n about the Mumbai terror attacks, which in his opinion has left the country in a predicamen­t. Imran told the crowd that the opponents are giving a wrong impression that the PTI will mistreat the minorities when they come in to power. This, he said, is false propaganda.

The focus for most parties has been corruption. Sharif’s disqualifi­cation is the rallying point for his opponents. His PML-N has focused on the achievemen­ts of his government which include the China-pakistan Economic Corridor as well as the reduction in power outages.

It is possibly not the record of the parties involved that upsets some Pakistanis but the fact that the army continues to undermine thecountry’sdemocrati­csystem. “Over the years, army influence continues to wax and wane. Right now it is at its highest ever, short of a military government being in place,” said former Senate chairman Raza Rabbani. Many have called its a Generals’ election and not a general election.

Others refer to the polls as a dirty election. And yet, there are prediction­s of both high turnout in most places as well as relatively peaceful polling on Wednesday.

“The rigging,” said Khuhro, “has already taken place. On Wednesday, we are seeing a staged and peaceful show.”

Internatio­nal observers have complained of their work being obstructed by the caretaker government.

A trickling of foreign journalist­s has made it into the country. Most have been refused visas.

More than 370,000 soldiers and officers are being deployed at polling stations all over the country. Not only is this number unpreceden­ted but also are the powers given to them, which equates the military officer with the election returning officer.

ATTACK KILLS 4 TROOPS AHEAD OF ELECTIONS

Militants killed four troops escorting an election convoy in the volatile southweste­rn province of Baluchista­n on Tuesday, Intelligen­ce officials said.

The attack, on the eve of elections, is the latest violence ahead of the balloting.

 ?? AP ?? Big brother watching: Election staff receive polling material in Peshawar as soldiers look on.
AP Big brother watching: Election staff receive polling material in Peshawar as soldiers look on.

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