Over 30 people have been killed in Pakistan, where millions cast ballots in the first peaceful turnover of power in the nation's 66-year history. On the eve of the vote the Pakistani Taliban vowed chaos as they deem the historic election anti-Islamic.
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election violence
The Saturday’s vote is the first time a civilian government is
transferring power after completing a full term in office without
falling to a military coup.
86 million registered voters across four provinces and four federal
territories have been electing the representatives to the National
Assembly and provincial assemblies.
There were 4,670 candidates standing for 272 seats in the
342-member parliament first-past-the-post system.
Some 70,000 polling stations, with about 40 per cent of them
intended for female voters, were opened across the country, staffed
by more than 600,000 workers.
According to initial data from the polling stations, the Pakistan Muslim League (PML-N) of former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and Imran Khan's Pakistan Movement for Justice have taken the lead in the general election.
The heads of both parties have already collected enough votes to book themselves places in the new parliament, AFP reports.
With official results not yet announced, Sharif has addressed
the crowd in Lahore, declaring PML-N’s win in the election. He said
that he hopes for the majority of the vote in order to avoid
coalition, but added that he’s ready to cooperate with other
parties in tackling Pakistan’s problem issues.
Former cricket star, Khan entered the race as a dark horse,
appealing to those disenchanted with mainstream politicians –
especially young voters – and may end up deciding the balance of
power if the election produces no clear winner.
The main contest is however expected to unfold between outgoing
President Asif Ali Zardari’s Pakistan Peoples’ Party (PPP) and the
opposition PML-N, with the latter expected to win the majority.
Though marred by corruption, an energy crisis, militant attacks,
controversial US drone killings and other issues plaguing the
current cabinet, the Pakistani elections have sparked excitement as
the first vote.
“The turnover in this election was remarkably high,”
Masood Malik, editor at the daily Dunya newspaper in Islamabad,
told RT. “It was more than 50 per cent. In some places it was
more than 60 per cent, which is a record in the history of this
country.”
According to Malik, the election is Pakistan’s big victory in the
war against the Taliban as the people “have voted against this
terrorism and this militancy and rejected this culture in this
country.
“The people have participated in this election with their full
spirit. The militants tried to stop the people from casting their
votes. But the people came out from their houses and ran to the
polling stations and they cast their votes,” he added.
However, the final hours of polling were dominated by rigging
allegations, with the Election Commission of Pakistan confirming
that they failed to hold free and fair elections in the country’s
largest city of Karachi because of the violence there.
As a result, the ECP has announced that a re-vote will take place
at more than 40 polling stations in Karachi, Dawn.com reports.
There were other violations registered, with reports of female
voters barred from taking part in the election in some conservative
parts of the northwest of the country. The situation recalls the
general election of 2008, when 564 of the 28,000 polling stations
opened for women saw no turnout at all. Men were also spotted
voting at female-only polling stations.
Voting amid violence
Security fears ran at a fever pitch during the election campaign, which saw 130 people lose their lives in terrorist attacks, as the Pakistani Taliban issued a number of threats, largely against three secular political parties.
The Pakistani military dispatched thousands of troops to polling stations in order to prevent militants from disrupting the vote. The Taliban previously threatened to carry out widespread attacks on Saturday, including suicide bombings, saying that it opposes the “infidel” system of democracy in the country.
Over 25 people were killed and around 200 injured on Saturday in Pakistan, with most of the victims coming from Karachi, which saw a number on militant attacks on the day.
The most devastating of them occurred in the city’s Landhi area as the political office of the Awami National Party (ANP) was targeted by an early morning bomb attack, which failed to kill candidate Aman Ullah.
Elsewhere in Pakistan, Taliban bombed polling stations and
police departments, shot at security officers and voters as well as
kidnapped candidates.
The violence prompted the suspension of polling in Charsadda and Naushahro Feroze and other cities in the country as the representatives of opposing parties clashed using firearms and grenades.
Several bombs were reportedly defused before voting began on Saturday morning, according to Al Jazeera. No one has so far taken the responsibility for the attacks, except for the initial two blasts in the coastal city of Karachi, claimed by Pakistani Taliban.
Adding to the anxiety, an unidentified gunman kidnapped the son of a former Prime Minister Yousuf Gilani on Thursday; his whereabouts are still unknown.
Despite all the disturbances, RT’s Lucy Kafanov reported from Pakistan that “all signs point to a successful democratic election here in Pakistan, which is critical for a country that has been ruled by the military for more than a half of its existence as an independent state.”
International security specialist, Patricia DeGennaro, told RT
that people of Pakistan are so fed up with conditions in their
country that they're courageous enough to head to polls despite the
danger.
“We saw the same thing in Afghanistan with the Taliban threatening
and, as we’re seeing, they are very serious about those threats.
And it’s difficult for people that don’t have a lot of
manoeuvrability with so many threats going on around them,” she
said. “Fear goes a long way, particularly, when you don’t know
when it’s going to happen and you’re looking at every corner.
People really take risks to get out there and exercise their right
and their voice. They’re becoming victims from an external power
and they’re becoming victims from their own internal struggle.
People become very tired. Remember when you’re so traumatized, you
become absolutely exhausted with this continuous type of reflection
in your reality. Sometimes it’s hard to be so
courageous.”