The Denver Post

Khan claims victory in Pakistan, seeks new relationsh­ip with U.S.

- By Kathy Gannon and Munir Ahmed

ISLAMABAD» Former cricket star Imran Khan declared victory Thursday in Pakistan’s parliament­ary election and vowed to run the country “as it has never before been run” by fighting corruption, seeking regional cooperatio­n and forging a new relationsh­ip with the U.S. that was not “one-sided.”

TV stations reported that Khan and his Tehreek-e-Insaf party, or PTI, maintained a commanding lead from Wednesday’s balloting. But his leading rival, Shahbaz Sharif, rejected the outcome, citing allegation­s of vote-rigging.

Pakistan’s election commission struggled with technical problems and had to revert to a manual count, delaying the announceme­nt of final results until Friday. That left unclear whether the PTI will have a simple majority in the National Assembly or have to form a coalition government.

But that didn’t stop the 65-year-old Khan from proclaimin­g his triumph in an address to the nation, in which he pledged to create an Islamic welfare state to provide education and employment for the poor to fulfill a campaign promise to create 10 million jobs.

“Today in front of you, in front of the people of Pakistan, I pledge I will run Pakistan in such a way as it has never before been run,” Khan said, vowing to wipe out corruption, strengthen institutio­ns he called dysfunctio­nal and regain national pride by developing internatio­nal relationsh­ips based on respect and equality.

While Khans appeared casual and conciliato­ry in his speech, his words were laced with passion. He said the United States treats Pakistan like a mercenary, giving it billions of dollars to fight the war on terrorism in a region beset with militant extremists.

“Unfortunat­ely, so far our relations were one-sided. America thinks that it gives Pakistan money to fight for them. Because of this Pakistan suffered a lot,” said Khan, who has been critical of the U.S.-led conflict in neighborin­g Afghanista­n.

He offered nothing to suggest an improvemen­t in Pakistan’s testy relationsh­ip with Washington since President Donald Trump’s tweets in January that accused Islamabad of taking U.S. aid and returning only lies and deceit.

Seeking good relations with his neighbors, Khan addressed Pakistan’s rival, India. The two nuclear powers have had a long-running conflict over the disputed region of Kashmir.

“Take one step toward us, and we will take two steps toward you,” he said in a peace offering while still decrying widespread human rights abuses in Kashmir.

Khan also advocated an open-border policy with Afghanista­n, even suggesting the two countries embrace a European Uniontype relationsh­ip. The plan seems unlikely, with Pakistan’s military building hundreds of border outposts and an accompanyi­ng fence along its western frontier with Afghanista­n despite often-violent opposition from Kabul.

Khan focused on what he wanted to do for the poor in Pakistan and his vision of a coun-

try that bowed to no one, where everyone was equal under the law and taxes were paid by the rich to fund services for the less fortunate.

His campaign message of a new Pakistan seemed to resonate with young voters in a country where 64 percent of its 200 million people are under 30.

Khan said the elections were the most transparen­t and promised to investigat­e every complaint of irregulari­ty his opponents presented.

“It is thanks to God (that) we won and we were successful,” he said.

More than a dozen TV channels projected the PTI would win as many as 119 seats of the 270 National Assembly seats that were contested, although the broadcaste­rs did not disclose their methodolog­y. The rest of the 342-seat parliament includes seats reserved for women and minorities. Voting for two seats was post- poned after one candidate died during the campaign and another was disqualifi­ed.

Although rights groups and minorities expressed worries before the voting about radical religious groups taking part, moderate voices seemed to prevail: None of the 265 candidates fielded by the outlawed Lashkar-e-Taiba won. That includes the son of co-founder and U.S.-designated terrorist Hafiz Saeed, who has a $10 million U.S. bounty on his head.

The candidates campaigned under the little known Allah-o-Akbar Tehreek party because Lashkar-e-Taiba is banned.

Even if Khan’s party wins a simple majority, he would need to wait until the president convenes the parliament to swear in the new lawmakers — traditiona­lly within a week.

He also faces opposition over the result from Sharif. He heads the Pakistan Muslim League, the party of his older brother, former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, who is in prison on corruption charges. TV projection­s give his party barely 61 seats.

 ?? Rizwan Tabassum, Getty Images ?? Supporters of Imran Khan, Pakistan’s cricketer turned prime minister who declared victory in Pakistan’s parliament­ary election, celebrate Thursday in Karachi. Khan, 65, has pledged to create 10 million jobs.
Rizwan Tabassum, Getty Images Supporters of Imran Khan, Pakistan’s cricketer turned prime minister who declared victory in Pakistan’s parliament­ary election, celebrate Thursday in Karachi. Khan, 65, has pledged to create 10 million jobs.

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