The Manila Times

Pakistan politician­s reclaim election symbols

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ISLAMABAD: Aamir Mughal brandished an eggplant before a gaggle of voters, rallying support behind the Pakistani staple during an election campaign, which he says is being undermined by bizarre symbols assigned to candidates.

“The eggplant is now a famous symbol across all of Pakistan,” declares the candidate for the capital Islamabad, a follower of jailed exprime minister Imran Khan.

“Now this has become the king of the vegetables.”

In Pakistan — where literacy rates hover at just 60 percent — political parties use icons to identify their candidates on the campaign trail and ballot papers.

As a military-backed crackdown puts the squeeze on opposition parties, some candidates say authoritie­s are trying to hinder their campaigns by allotting them symbols that are either degrading or downright weird.

Khan has been barred from standing in Thursday’s poll, and his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party has been stripped of their long-time cricket bat emblem over failing to meet election commission rules.

Dozens of his followers are also not allowed to stand, and some of those on the ticket — now running as independen­ts — have reported harassment or been forced into hiding.

Others have been assigned a random bric-a-brac of symbols and are scrambling to make an impression on the campaign trail.

A spokesman for the Election Commission of Pakistan said the symbols are chosen from a list designed for independen­ts and “are purely the prerogativ­e of the returning officers.”

The humble eggplant — or “baingan” in Pakistan’s Urdu language — is a key ingredient in Pakistani cuisine. It is also ripe with symbolic connotatio­ns, notably deployed as an emoji suggestive of male anatomy.

“The election commission assigned us this symbol to make a mockery of us,” said 46-year-old Mughal. But Mughal’s team has leaned into their fate.

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