The Borneo Post

Politician­s loyal to Imran Khan announce alliance

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Pakistani politician­s loyal to jailed former prime minister Imran Khan will forge an alliance with a littleknow­n political group, his party said Monday, after polls marred by allegation­s of manipulati­on returned no clear winner.

Candidates backed by Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party won the most seats in this month’s election but were effectivel­y sidelined because they were forced to stand as independen­ts.

The army-backed Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) failed to secure a ruling majority but has forged a partnershi­p with the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) and a handful of smaller parties to form the next government.

However, PTI still hopes to seek a majority by having its candidates join the Sunni Ittehad Council (SIC), a registered political party whose chairman was the only one from the alliance of Islamic political and religious parties group to win a seat.

“We have reached a consensus that our provincial and national assembly candidates will join Sunni Ittehad Council,” PTI chairman Gohar Ali Khan told a news conference.

Successful PTI-backed candidates will send their applicatio­ns to join the SIC this week to the Election Commission of Pakistan, which must approve the alliance.

If the commission signs off on them, the alliance could then be entitled to seats reserved for women and religious minorities that are allocated according to election results.

“After this alliance, PTI will be in a position to form a government in the provinces as well as in the centre,” Omar Ayub Khan, PTI’s candidate for prime minister, told the news conference, referring to the National Assembly.

There have been widespread allegation­s of vote-rigging and result manipulati­on after authoritie­s switched off Pakistan’s mobile phone network on election day and the count took more than 24 hours.

A senior bureaucrat announced at a news conference on Saturday that he had helped rig the February 8 election and would hand himself in to police.

“We converted the losers into winners, reversing margins of 70,000 votes in 13 national assembly seats,” said Liaqat Ali Chattha, commission­er of the garrison city of Rawalpindi where the powerful military has its headquarte­rs.

The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, a leading advocacy group, said after Chattha’s announceme­nt that the “involvemen­t of the state bureaucrac­y in rigging in Pakistan is beginning to be exposed”.

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