The Phnom Penh Post

Khan supporters celebrate as Pakistan faces electoral chaos

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PAKISTAN was gripped by electoral chaos on Thursday with the outgoing ruling party denouncing “blatant rigging” in the pivotal general election and rejecting unofficial, partial results suggesting victory for former cricket champion Imran Khan.

Results were still being tallied on Thursday, hours after Khan’s supporters took to the streets to celebrate victory in an election opponents have said the powerful military rigged in his favour.

Local media said roughly half the votes had been counted more than 17 hours after polls closed, an unpreceden­ted delay that has fuelled widespread fears over the legitimacy of the exercise.

But newspapers and television channels were predicting victory for Khan’s PakistanTe­hreek-e-Insaf, with the partial results giving him at least 100 seats so far in the National Assembly, the lower house.

A majority of 137 seats is needed to form a government.

The English-language Dawn newspaper declared Khan had delivered a “knockout punch”. The outgoing Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz, meanwhile, “was faced with its toughest hour and . . . on the verge of collapse”, the paper said in a front-page analysis.

The Election Commission of Pakistan dismissed allegation­s of manipulati­on, blaming the delay on glitches in new, untested counting software.

“These elections were 100 percent fair and transparen­t,” said Chief Elec- tion Commission­er Sardar Muhammad Raza early on Thursday as outcry grew.

Raza did not say when election authoritie­s would be in a position to announce the results, but some media reports suggested it would not be until late on Thursday evening.

‘Outright rigging’

Late on Wednesday, the PML-N, which had been in power since 2013, rejected the results because of “outright rigging”, and vowed it would use “all political and legal options for redressal of these glaring excesses”.

“What they have done has pushed Pakistan back 30 years... People will not bear it,” the party’s leader Shahbaz Sharif, brother of jailed former premier Nawaz Sharif, said.

Other major parties also alleged fraud, including the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP), whose chairman Bilawal Bhutto Zardari echoed the PML-N’s claim that party representa­tives were barred from monitoring the count.

The size of Khan’s lead against the once-mighty PML-N, when many analysts had predicted a coalition would be likely, was also increasing concern over the process, analysts said.

“The surprising­ly high seat total for PTI, even as the votes continue to be counted, will be enough to trigger the suspicions of the PPP and PMLN,” said Michael Kugelman, an analyst at the Wilson Center in Washington.

Neither Khan nor the military, which had been accused of seeking to manipulate the vote in his favour in the months leading up to the polls, have yet commented on the situation. Both have previously denied allegation­s of interventi­on.

The controvers­y follows a campaign already considered by some observers to be one of the “dirtiest” in Pakistan’s history because of the allegation­s against the military, and marked by the increased visibility of extremist religious parties.

“This is complete chaos,” said political analyst Azeema Cheema, who said she was “very concerned” about what comes next. “It depends on how the civilian disobedien­ce is being organised. You may have spontaneou­s riots among political party workers. Then maybe political parties will organise sit-ins and demonstrat­ions,” she said.

Kugelman shared the concern. “I don’t see any way to prevent a period of turmoil,” he said.

But PTI supporters were ecstatic at the projected results.

First time voter Fahad Hussain, 21, said the party had successful­ly lured the country’s massive youth population.

“He motivated the youth,” Hussain said in the capital Islamabad as he hit the streets to celebrate the victory with friends.

 ?? AAMIR QURESH I/AFP ?? A Pakistani motorcycli­st rides past a billboard featuring an image of Imran Khan on Thursday.
AAMIR QURESH I/AFP A Pakistani motorcycli­st rides past a billboard featuring an image of Imran Khan on Thursday.

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