Oman Daily Observer

Khan’s party seeks partners

FRESH POLLS SOUGHT: Rival parties plan protests over alleged vote-rigging

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ISLAMABAD: Imran Khan’s party said it has begun talks with independen­ts and small parties to form a coalition government after a resounding triumph in Pakistan’s general election, as rival parties planned protests over alleged vote rigging.

Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-einsaf party (PTI) won 116 seats in Wednesday’s ballot, short of the 137 needed for a simple majority but a surprising­ly strong showing that helped fuel suspicion of rigging.

Khan’s party has begun reaching out to potential coalition partners to form a government, according to spokesman Fawad Chaudhry, a task that analysts said should be straightfo­rward. “We have contacted small parties and independen­t members, they will soon meet party leaders in Islamabad,” Chaudhry said late on Friday, adding that the process was likely to take about 10 days.

Chaudhry’s comments followed an announceme­nt by rival parties vowing to launch a protest “movement”, after foreign observers voiced concerns about the contest. More than a dozen parties calling themselves the All Parties Conference (APC) promised to protest over the results and demanded new polls.

The announceme­nt by the All Parties Conference (APC), including the outgoing Pakistan Muslim League-nawaz (PML-N), is a fresh obstacle to power for Khan. However the group remained divided with some parties pledging to boycott joining the National Assembly and others calling for a new vote. The PML-N announced its support for the group but stopped short of saying it would boycott the new parliament. And the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP), which was notably absent from the APC, said in a separate announceme­nt that it rejected the results, but vowed to try to convince the other parties to participat­e in the parliament­ary process. Retired general and analyst Talat Masood said the APC may succeed in sparking pockets of unrest but did not see the movement upsetting stability at the national level.

“Opposition parties are divided and they are not genuinely in a mood to form any major opposition. I don’t think they have this stamina and the support of the people for going for a big movement.”

The protests announceme­nt late on Friday came as the United States, the European Union and other observers aired reservatio­ns over widespread claims that the powerful military had tried to fix the playing field in Khan’s favour.

Khan’s victory represents an end to decades of rotating leadership between the PML-N and the Bhutto dynasty’s PPP that was punctuated by periods of military rule. The vote was meant to be a rare democratic transition in the Muslim country, which has been ruled by the powerful army for roughly half its history.

But it was marred by violence and allegation­s of military interferen­ce in the months leading up to the vote, with Khan seen as the beneficiar­y. Khan will face myriad challenges, including militant extremism, an economic crisis with speculatio­n that Pakistan will have to seek a bailout from the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, water shortages and a booming population.

 ?? — Reuters ?? Pakistani opposition leader Maulana Fazalur Rehman (2nd R) and Shahbaz Sharif (2ndl), head of Pakistan Muslim League-nawaz (PML-N), attend an All Parties Conference in Islamabad on Saturday.
— Reuters Pakistani opposition leader Maulana Fazalur Rehman (2nd R) and Shahbaz Sharif (2ndl), head of Pakistan Muslim League-nawaz (PML-N), attend an All Parties Conference in Islamabad on Saturday.

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