Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Amid post-poll unease, Imran’s PTI gains edge

-

Pakistan’s national election vote count concluded on Sunday with independen­ts, mostly backed by jailed former Prime Minister Imran Khan, winning 101 of the 264 seats, the election commission’s website showed.

The final tally was released more than 60 hours after voting concluded in Thursday’s national elections, a delay that has raised questions about the process.

The independen­ts came in ahead of the party of another former prime minister, Nawaz Sharif, which won 75 seats, making it the largest single party in parliament as Khan’s independen­ts ran as individual­s.

Sharif has said his party is talking to other groups to form a coalition government as it had failed to win a clear majority on its own.

Khan’s PTI party had threatened to hold nationwide peaceful protests on Sunday if the vote tally was not released overnight, and some small protests took place overnight.

Pakistan’s interim government says the delay was caused by communicat­ion issues due

to a mobile internet outage on election day. The outage, which authoritie­s said was for security reasons, drew concern from rights groups and foreign government­s, including the United States.

In a post on social media platform X on Sunday, a PTI party secretary called off general protests, but said there should be demonstrat­ions at certain electoral offices where they were concerned about “forged” results.

Around 93 of the independen­t candidates who won seats were associated with Khan’s PTI party.

Khan’s supporters were running as independen­ts because they had been barred from contesting the polls under his party’s electoral symbol by the election commission for not complying with electoral laws.

Despite the ban and Khan’s imprisonme­nt for conviction­s on charges ranging from leaking state secrets to corruption and an unlawful marriage, millions of the former cricketer’s supporters came out to vote for

him, even though he cannot be part of any government while he remains in prison.

One disadvanta­ge the independen­ts face in trying to form a government is they are not eligible to be allocated any of parliament’s 70 reserved seats, which are distribute­d according to party strength in the final tally. Sharif’s party could get up to 20 of these seats.

The election commission previously flagged that results for two seats could not yet be included - one in which a candidate was killed requiring the postponeme­nt of polling, and another in which polling would be completed later this month.

Pakistan police meanwhile warned that they would come down hard on illegal gatherings after PTI urged supporters to protest alleged rigging in last week’s election.

Authoritie­s warned they would take strict action, saying so-called Section 144 orders were in place — under a colonial-era law banning gatherings of two or more people.

“Some individual­s are inciting illegal gatherings around the Election Commission and other government offices,” said a statement Sunday from Islamabad’s police force.

“Legal action will be taken against unlawful assemblies. It should be noted that soliciting for gatherings is also a crime,” it added.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Supporters of Imran Khan's Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf protest on the Peshawar-Islamabad motorway on Sunday.
REUTERS Supporters of Imran Khan's Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf protest on the Peshawar-Islamabad motorway on Sunday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India