Eastern Eye (UK)

‘Litmus test for Khan’s popularity’ PAKISTAN POLITICIAN TO CONTEST SEVEN SEATS IN BY-ELECTIONS

- SHOW OF STRENGTH: Imran Khan

FORMER Pakistan prime minister Imran Khan is a candidate for seven of eight national assembly seats in a key by-election last Sunday (16), a vote he says is “a referendum” on his popularity.

The by-election is the latest twist in political wrangling that began after Khan’s April 10 ouster via a parliament­ary no-confidence vote. It comes as the nation grapples with the aftermath of devasting monsoon floods that affected more than 30 million people and left a third of the country under water.

Candidates can stand for multiple seats in Pakistan elections. If they win more than one they choose which to keep, and a separate vote must later be held for those forfeited.

It is rare, however, for a candidate to stand for as many seats as Khan is doing, and his disruptive move is clearly to gauge his popularity. “This is not just a simple election, it’s a referendum,” he told a rally late last Friday (14) in Karachi, the bustling port city in the south of the nation of 220 million.

Khan has held dozens of political rallies since being ousted – drawing crowds of tens of thousands – and has vowed soon to announce the date of a “long march” of his supporters on the capital, Islamabad.

He is demanding that the coalition government of prime minister Shehbaz Sharif calls an immediate general election rather than wait until October of next year. “If he wins most of the seats, he will press the government more,” political analyst Hassan Askari Rizvi told AFP. “But the government will reject the election call, claiming it doesn’t reflect the national will.”

Khan has already scored a string of recent by-election victories, with his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party seizing control in July of the state assembly in Punjab, the country’s most populous province.

He has, so far, also emerged largely unscathed from a series of court cases against him and his party.

Pakistan’s courts are often used to tie up lawmakers in tedious and long-winding proceeding­s that rights monitors have criticised for stifling political opposition.

Khan blames the current government for soaring inflation in the country, although most analysts agree Sharif inherited the country’s economic woes.

Catastroph­ic flooding this summer put one-third of Pakistan under water, displaced eight million people, and caused at least an estimated $28 billion (£25bn) in damage.

The United Nations has warned of a “second wave” of catastroph­e, with the risk that deaths from waterborne disease and malnutriti­on will outstrip the 1,700 drowned and electrocut­ed in the initial cascade.

Khan rode to power in 2018 on a populist platform promising social reforms, religious conservati­sm and fighting corruption, overturnin­g decades of rule by two feuding political dynasties interspers­ed with military takeovers.

But, under his tenure, the economy stagnated and he lost the support of the army, which was accused of helping to get him elected. Last Sunday’s polls take place in eight constituen­cies of three provinces – three each in Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a, where Khan’s party holds sway, and two in Sindh.

“This is indeed a litmus test of his popularity provided elections are held in a free and fair atmosphere and they are not rigged,” said Imtiaz Gul of the Center for Research and Security Studies in Islamabad.

“If he wins the majority of the seats, that will again be a testimony to the success of his narrative that he has built since his exit from power and that will obviously bring more pressure on the government.”

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