The New Zealand Herald

Favourite Khan to face tough innings

An economic crisis awaits ex-cricket star

- Kathy Gannon Zarar Khan

Fand ormer cricket star Imran Khan looks set to become Pakistan’s new prime minister.

Vote counting in an election marred by allegation­s of fraud and militant violence has been tediously slow, yet from the outset Khan and his party have maintained a commanding lead.

Election officials said it will be this morning before an official count confirms Pakistan’s next government.

But before even half the votes were counted, Khan’s leading rival Shahbaz Sharif, who heads the Pakistan Muslim League — the party of jailed ex-Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif — rejected the vote, generating fears that disgruntle­d losers could delay the formation of the next government.

The winner will face a crumbling economy and bloodshed by militants, who sent a suicide bomber to a crowding polling station in the southweste­rn city of Quetta to carry out a deadly attack that killed 31 people.

The parliament­ary balloting marked only the second time in Pakistan’s 71-year history that one civilian government has handed power to another in the country of 200 million people.

Yet there have been widespread concerns during the election campaign about manipulati­on by the military, which has directly or indirectly ruled Pakistan for most of its existence.

In a tweet on his official account, Pakistan’s military spokesman General Asif Ghafoor called accusation­s of interferen­ce “malicious propaganda.”

The tweet, which featured a collage of pictures of Pakistanis handing military personnel at polling stations flowers and elderly women kissing soldiers, Ghafoor wrote that the “world has seen your love and respect for Pak Armed Forces & LEAs (law enforcemen­t agencies) today. U hv rejected all kinds of malicious propaganda.”

The military deployed 350,000 troops at the 85,000 polling stations. More than 11,000 candidates vied for 270 seats in the National Assembly, and 577 seats in four provincial assemblies.

The attack outside the polling station in Quetta, the capital of Baluchista­n province, underscore­d the difficulti­es the majority Muslim nation faces on its wobbly journey towards sustained democracy. Baluchista­n also saw the worst violence during campaignin­g earlier this month, when a suicide bomber struck at a political rally, killing 149 people, including the candidate Siraj Raisani. Another 400 were wounded. Isis claimed responsibi­lity for that attack.

Khan supporters celebrated outside party offices countrywid­e. Most of the revellers were young men, who danced to the sound of beating drums draped in black and green-coloured flags.

Khan, who is a cricket legend of almost mythical proportion­s in his

country, has appealed to the the youth with promises of a new Pakistan. According to the United Nations, 65 per cent of Pakistan’s 200 million people are under 30 years old.

aMoeed Yusuf, associate vicepresid­ent of the Asia Centre at the Washington-based US Institute of Peace, said the top challenge for the next government will be the economic

crisis. “The new government is going to be in an unenviable position, and especially Imran Khan, as he is not the preferred prime minister for Pakistan’s two traditiona­l chief

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