The National - News

Stability is crucial ahead of Pakistan election next week

Terrorist bombings and corruption allegation­s are haunting the election process

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Election time in Pakistan is notorious for deepening fractures and divides. But this time at the polls, even by past standards, has been particular­ly fraught. Last week, as former three-time prime minister Nawaz Sharif arrived in the country to face immediate arrest, reportedly to boost his party’s election chances, a suicide blast in the southweste­rn province of Balochista­n killed 128 people. One of the bloodiest in Pakistan’s violent history, the attack was a damning indictment of the country’s weak security infrastruc­ture. It was also a sombre omen ahead of next week’s elections, on which the country’s long-term stability depends.

The days following Sharif’s arrest – sentenced to 10 years for corruption in his absence – have been marked by crippling insecurity, to which Pakistan is, tragically, becoming all too accustomed. Mobile phone signals were cut as security forces attempted simultaneo­usly to respond to a terror attack and pacify hordes of Sharif supporters, who marched to the airport to meet him. Yet just last week, there was cause for optimism. Imran Khan – the former Pakistani cricket captain turned devoted politician – appeared on the brink of a historic victory. Meanwhile, Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, heir to the illustriou­s Bhutto dynasty, was breathing fresh life into a stale campaign, leaving Sharif’s lacklustre PML-N party, now led by his brother Shahbaz, looking destined for quiet electoral defeat. A week on, Pakistani politics has rarely looked so chaotic as it does now.

It now falls to the country’s military establishm­ent and fragile interim government to restore some semblance of order ahead of next week’s polls. It is a challenge of considerab­le proportion­s, not least because of the military’s well-publicised involvemen­t in Pakistani politics. And long term, Pakistan needs to do more to tackle the root causes of extremism. Scars remain of a massacre at a school in Peshawar in 2014, which killed more than 150 people. Last week’s Balochista­n bombing shows the lack of progress in combating militancy. The timing is not coincident­al. It is designed to inflict maximum impact on a fragile country and sow chaos ahead of crucial elections. Khan remains favourite to take over the troubled nation. But if some stability cannot be brought in the coming days, the future government’s mandate risks being crippled.

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