Las Vegas Review-Journal

Pakistan re-elects PM amid claims of vote-rigging

- By Munir Ahmed

ISLAMABAD — Lawmakers in Pakistan’s National Assembly on Sunday elected Shehbaz Sharif as the country’s new prime minister for the second time as allies of imprisoned former premier Imran Khan in parliament shouted in protest, alleging rigging in last month’s election.

Khan is serving prison terms in multiple cases and has been barred from seeking or holding office. Sharif replaced him as prime minister after his ouster in a no-confidence vote in parliament in April 2022.

Speaker Ayaz Sadiq said Sharif secured 201 votes, defeating Omar Ayub of the Sunni Ittehad Council who got 92 votes. The winner only needs 169 votes to get a majority.

Ayub was backed by Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-insaf party, or PTI, whose candidates could not get enough seats to form a government on their own. The PTI refused to hold talks with its rivals to form a coalition.

Following days of negotiatio­ns, Sharif ’s Pakistan Muslim League party and his supporters formed an alliance after the Feb. 8 election, which was overshadow­ed by militant violence, a nationwide mobile phone shutdown,

Khan’s exclusion from the vote, and an unusual delay in announcing the result.

Authoritie­s said cutting communicat­ions was necessary to avoid attacks on candidates and security forces.

However, the delay drew criticism from Khan’s party, which insists the vote was rigged to stop it from getting a majority. The party claims it has evidence that its victory “was stolen during the vote count,” a charge the Election Commission denies.

Sharif, in his acceptance speech in parliament Sunday, said: “We were subjected to political victimizat­ion in the past but never took any revenge.”

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