The Borneo Post

Pakistan to deploy thousands of security forces for election

-

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan will saturate its northweste­rn region with thousands of security forces before next month’s general election, officials said Tuesday, as Islamabad battles rising militancy ahead of a controvers­ial poll.

On Feb 8, the nation of 240 million will vote in delayed polls already marred by allegation­s of pre-poll rigging, with popular opposition leader Imran Khan jailed and barred from running.

Previous Pakistan election campaigns have witnessed spasms of violence, with scores of candidates and voters targeted by Islamist bombings and gun attacks.

In the first week of February some 5,000 paramilita­ry Frontier Constabula­ry (FC) forces will deploy to the northweste­rn Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a province bordering Afghanista­n, commander Moazzam Jah Ansari told AFP.

Last week, an independen­t candidate running for the provincial assembly was killed alongside two aides when his car was hit by a spray of gunfire as he campaigned in the province, police said.

A senior regional government official told AFP there was a ‘deteriorat­ing security situation’, and ‘additional police teams will be deployed at polling stations’ on voting day.

A further 1,700 FC forces will be stationed in the capital Islamabad and 400 in the southern and most populous city of Karachi, tasked with backing up police who bear the brunt of militant attacks.

Meanwhile on Tuesday, in an order issued by his office, the chief minister of southern Sindh province, Maqbool Baqar warned “there have been multiple reports of attacks on candidates” running for the months-overdue election.

Some have been “kidnapped in broad daylight”, he said, describing it as a “rising tide of crime”.

Last year saw casualties hit a six-year high with more than 1,500 civilians, security forces and militants killed, according to the Islamabad-based Center for Research and Security Studies.

The biggest militant threat to Pakistan is the domestic chapter of the Taliban movement, known as Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP).

Islamabad has accused Kabul’s Taliban government of harbouring TTP fighters, allowing them to strike on Pakistani soil with impunity. Kabul has consistent­ly denied the allegation­s.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Commuters move past the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) flags hung over a street in Karachi, ahead of the country’s upcoming general elections.
— AFP photo Commuters move past the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) flags hung over a street in Karachi, ahead of the country’s upcoming general elections.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia