The Borneo Post

Pakistan lawmakers begin electing new president

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ISLAMABAD: Pakistan began voting for a new president yesterday, with a close ally of Prime Minister Imran Khan seen as the favourite to replace Mamnoon Hussain as the ceremonial head of the world’s only nuclear-armed Muslim state.

More than a thousand lawmakers from both houses of parliament and the country’s four provincial assemblies began choosing from among three candidates, with unofficial results expected late yesterday.

Arif Alvi, a former dentist who is a close ally of Khan, is believed to be the likely winner after opposition parties failed to come together to field a joint candidate.

Khan, who captained Pakistan to cricket World Cup victory in 1992, became prime minister last month after his controvers­ial victory in the mid- July parliament­ary elections.

His critics accuse him of having benefited from an underhand interventi­on by the military in his favour, and fraud on the day of the vote.

Alvi is running against Maulana Fazlur Rehman of the Jamiat Ulema-i-Islam, an opposition party backed by the ousted Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz ( PML-N), which holds the second-largest number of seats in the National Assembly – the lower house of parliament.

Alvi is one of the founders of Khan’s ruling Pakistan Tehreek- e-Insaf ( PTI) party, and served as its secretary general for eight years starting in 2006.

The father- of-four and an active Twitter user, Alvi was elected an MP in the southern megacity of Karachi in 2013, winning re- election in the July vote.

If elected, Alvi will succeed Hussain, a former businessma­n and close ally of ousted premier Nawaz Sharif who kept a low profile during his tenure.

An Alvi victory will further cement PTI’s position at the apex of politics in Pakistan, a Muslim giant of more than 207 million people that has seen security improve dramatical­ly in recent years after a decade-long struggle against Islamist extremism.

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