East Bay Times

Ex-prime minister says he will seek a coalition to run government after trailing his jailed rival

- By Riazat Butt and Munir Ahmed

The former prime minister of Pakistan expected his party would claim an easy victory in the country's parliament­ary elections, sending him to the top job for a fourth time. Instead, Nawaz Sharif faces a difficult path to power.

Independen­t candidates backed by his imprisoned rival, Imran Khan, were leading in the vote count Friday, a surprising­ly strong showing given assertions by Khan's supporters and a national rights body that the balloting was manipulate­d to favor Sharif.

That scrambled the plans of Sharif — and the security establishm­ent backing him — forcing him to announce plans Friday to try to form a coalition government.

A day earlier, Sharif had gruffly rejected the idea of a coalition, confidentl­y telling reporters after casting his vote that he wanted a single party running Pakistan for a full five-year term.

Khan, a former cricket star turned Islamist politician with a significan­t grassroots following, was disqualifi­ed from running in Thursday's election because of criminal conviction­s. He contends his sentences and a slew of legal cases pending against him were politicall­y motivated.

Khan's party's candidates were forced to run as independen­ts after they were barred from using the party symbol — a cricket bat — to help illiterate voters find them on ballots.

Despite those setbacks — and with most of the 266 National Assembly constituen­cies announced by the election oversight body — candidates backed by Khan's Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party, or PTI, had won 99 seats. Sharif's Pakistan Muslim League party had 71 seats. The election was postponed in one constituen­cy because of the killing of one of the candidates.

However, with a third major party in the mix, nobody could declare outright victory.

Sharif acknowledg­ed that, telling supporters “we don't have enough of a majority to form a government without the support of others and we invite allies to join the coalition so we can make joint efforts to pull Pakistan out of its problems.”

“We will have to sit together to settle all matters,” he said.

However, Pakistan's deeply divided political climate is unlikely to produce a strong coalition pushing for the betterment of a country grappling with high inflation, year-round energy outages and militant attacks.

The lack of a majority did not stop Sharif's relatives and loyalists from appearing on a balcony at his party headquarte­rs, waving to the crowds below. People threw rose petals on Sharif's car as he arrived to address party workers.

Meanwhile, PTI chairman Gohar Khan told Pakistani news channel Geo that his party's own count showed it securing a total of 150 seats, enough to form a government, though 169 seats are required for a majority in the 336-seat National Assembly, or lower house of parliament.

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