Imran Khan warns that Pakistan’s election could be a farce

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Imran Khan warns that Pakistan’s election could be a farce

His party is being unfairly muzzled, the former prime minister writes from prison

Today pakistan is being ruled by caretaker governments at both the federal level and provincial level. These administrations are constitutionally illegal because elections were not held within 90 days of parliamentary assemblies being dissolved.

The public is hearing that elections will supposedly be held on February 8th. But having been denied the same in two provinces, Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, over the past year—despite a Supreme Court order last March that those votes should be held within three months—they are right to be sceptical about whether the national vote will take place.

The country’s election commission has been tainted by its bizarre actions. Not only has it defied the top court but it has also rejected my Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (pti) party’s nominations for first-choice candidates, hindered the party’s internal elections and launched contempt cases against me and other pti leaders for simply criticising the commission.

Whether elections happen or not, the manner in which I and my party have been targeted since a farcical vote of no confidence in April 2022 has made one thing clear: the establishment—the army, security agencies and the civil bureaucracy—is not prepared to provide any playing field at all, let alone a level one, for pti.

It was, after all, the establishment that engineered our removal from government under pressure from America, which was becoming agitated with my push for an independent foreign policy and my refusal to provide bases for its armed forces. I was categorical that we would be a friend to all but would not be anyone’s proxy for wars. I did not come to this view lightly. It was shaped by the huge losses Pakistan had incurred collaborating with America’s “war on terror”, not least the 80,000 Pakistani lives lost.

In March 2022 an official from America’s State Department met Pakistan’s then ambassador in Washington, dc. After that meeting the ambassador sent a cipher message to my government. I later saw the message, via the then foreign minister, Shah Mahmood Qureshi, and it was subsequently read out in cabinet.

In view of what the cipher message said, I believe that the American official’s message was to the effect of: pull the plug on Imran Khan’s prime ministership through a vote of no confidence, or else. Within weeks our government was toppled and I discovered that Pakistan’s Chief of Army Staff, General Qamar Javed Bajwa, had, through the security agencies, been working on our allies and parliamentary backbenchers for several months to move against us.

People flocked onto the streets to protest against this regime change, and in the next few months pti won 28 out of 37 by-elections and held massive rallies across the country, sending a clear message as to where the public stood. These rallies attracted a level of female participation that we believe was unprecedented in Pakistan’s history. This unnerved the powers that had engineered our government’s removal.

To add to their panic, the administration that replaced us destroyed the economy, bringing about unprecedented inflation and a currency devaluation within 18 months. The contrast was clear for everyone to see: the pti government had not only saved Pakistan from bankruptcy but also won international praise for its handling of the covid-19 pandemic. In addition, despite a spike in commodity prices, we steered the economy to real gdp growth of 5.8% in 2021 and 6.1% in 2022.

Unfortunately, the establishment had decided I could not be allowed to return to power, so all means of removing me from the political landscape were used. There were two assassination attempts on my life. My party’s leaders, workers and social-media activists, along with supportive journalists, were abducted, incarcerated, tortured and pressured to leave pti. Many of them remain locked up, with new charges being thrown at them every time the courts give them bail or set them free. Worse, the current government has gone out of its way to terrorise and intimidate pti’s female leaders and workers in an effort to discourage women from participating in politics.

I face almost 200 legal cases and have been denied a normal trial in an open court. A false-flag operation on May 9th 2023—involving, among other things, arson at military installations falsely blamed on pti—led to several thousand arrests, abductions and criminal charges within 48 hours. The speed showed it was pre-planned.

This was followed by many of our leaders being tortured or their families threatened into giving press conferences and engineered television interviews to state that they were leaving the party. Some were compelled to join other, newly created political parties. Others were made to give false testimony against me under duress.

Despite all this, pti remains popular, with 66% support in a Pattan-Coalition 38 poll held in December; my personal approval rating is even higher. Now the election commission, desperate to deny the party the right to contest elections, is indulging in all manner of unlawful tricks. The courts seem to be losing credibility daily.

Meanwhile, a former prime minister with a conviction for corruption, Nawaz Sharif, has returned from Britain, where he was living as an absconder from Pakistani justice. In November a Pakistani court overturned the conviction.

It is my belief that Mr Sharif has struck a deal with the establishment whereby it will support his acquittal and throw its weight behind him in the upcoming elections. But so far the public has been unrelenting in its support for pti and its rejection of the “selected”.

It is under these circumstances that elections may be held on February 8th. All parties are being allowed to campaign freely except for pti. I remain incarcerated, in solitary confinement, on absurd charges that include treason. Those few of our party’s leaders who remain free and not underground are not allowed to hold even local worker conventions. Where pti workers manage to gather together they face brutal police action.

In this scenario, even if elections were held they would be a disaster and a farce, since pti is being denied its basic right to campaign. Such a joke of an election would only lead to further political instability. This, in turn, would further aggravate an already volatile economy.

The only viable way forward for Pakistan is fair and free elections, which would bring back political stability and rule of law, as well as ushering in desperately needed reforms by a democratic government with a popular mandate. There is no other way for Pakistan to disentangle itself from the crises confronting it. Unfortunately, with democracy under siege, we are heading in the opposite direction on all these fronts.



 
Imran says ‘verbally dictated’ article published in The Economist

Incarcerated PTI chief Imran Khan on Monday said he had verbally dictated his guest essay published in British publication The Economist, which went viral on social media.

Imran was convicted in the Toshakhana case on August 5, and sentenced to three years’ imprisonment. On August 28, the Islamabad High Court had suspended his sentence. However, he has remained in jail since in other cases registered against him.

A guest essay attributed to Imran in The Economist on January 4 indicated that he had serious doubts about whether the upcoming elections would be held or not.

The piece reiterated his allegations about how a regime change brought about after US government pressure led to a vote of no-confidence against him last year and described the May 9 riots as a “false-flag operation” which was “pre-planned”.

But an editor’s note at the end of the essay noted that the Pakistan government and US State Department denied the allegations of American interference, saying that the government was prosecuting him under the Official Secrets Act.

While sources within the party were hesitant to comment on how the writing may have been relayed to the publication from inside prison, they had insisted that the words were indeed those of Imran. Some observers had expressed doubts over whether the article was indeed by Imran but many noted that the tone and content of the article was consistent with his views.

Caretaker Information Minister Murtaza Solangi had subsequently said the government would be writing to the editor of the British publication about the matter.

During a hearing on the Toshakhana and Al-Qadir Trust cases today in Adiala Jail, the PTI founder was questioned by journalists about whether he wrote the essay.

“I own the column published in an international journal. I had given verbal guidelines regarding the column. The article was written and published as a result of these guidelines. I had verbally dictated the article,” Imran told reporters.

The PTI chief did, however, say that it was “the age of artificial intelligence”, adding that next week, a speech of his would also arrive on social media.

It is to be noted that Imran’s party did use artificial intelligence to campaign from behind bars in December, with a voice clone of his giving an impassioned speech on his behalf during a virtual PTI rally.

Imran, in his exchange with the reporters today, also said that the general elections should be held at any cost, adding that they were very necessary for economic and political stability.

“It has been made difficult for us to contest the elections. Despite that, the polls should happen timely,” he said.


 
Imran Khan’s contribution to The Economist has reached a significant milestone, emerging as the most widely viewed article since 2007, amassing an impressive 1.2 million views.

This achievement stands out as none of the posts covering diverse topics such as India, the UK, Trump, Ukraine, and Palestine have garnered views close to the 100,000 mark, making Imran Khan’s article a standout in terms of readership.

 
Even from the prison, he is still making a great impact in Pakistani politics. No doubt that he still has millions of supporters in the country who are likely to vote for his party in the upcoming election.
 
Even from the prison, he is still making a great impact in Pakistani politics. No doubt that he still has millions of supporters in the country who are likely to vote for his party in the upcoming election.
Somewhere in the region of 70-80%
 
Is he boycotting the elections? If he thinks it’s a farce, he shouldn’t even participate in it.
 
Is he boycotting the elections? If he thinks it’s a farce, he shouldn’t even participate in it.
That is what the opposition wants from him because they know that even with farcical elections they can't compete with him
 
Section 144 imposed in Punjab to hamper PTI show: Imran

Former prime minister Imran Khan on Wednesday said that the Punjab government had imposed Section 144 of the Criminal Procedure Code (CrPC) to hamper the upcoming show of power by the Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf’s candidates.

He was speaking to media persons after attending proceedings of GBP190 million, Toshakhana, and cipher cases.

Accountability judge Mohammad Bashir deferred the indictment of Mr Khan in the £190m reference as the defence counsel was absent.

Judge of Special Court (Official Secrets Act) Abual Hasnat Mohammad Zulqarnain, on the other hand, concluded the cross-examination of four prosecution witnesses in the cipher case.

Indictment of former PM deferred in £190m case; cross-examination concluded in cipher case; ECP to proceed against Imran, Fawad after polls

There are 25 prosecution witnesses to be cross-examined by the counsel for Imran Khan and Shah Mehmood Qureshi.

The witnesses cross-examined on Wednesday included Deputy Director of Ministry of Foreign Affairs Iqra Ashraf, Imran Sajid, Shamoon Qaiser and cipher assistant Mohammad Nauman.

Later, Mr Khan told media persons that the caretaker government, a few individuals in the establishment and the Election Commission of Pakistan are united against his party.

He claimed that PTI had an overwhelming vote bank within the armed forces and the party would not be deterred whatever coercive measure were adopted to suppress its voice.

Mr Khan said he never witnessed such a pre-poll rigging in the country’s history and they planned to rig Feb 8 elections, but they would see the public rage on the election day.

In reply to a question about the possibility of a deal with stakeholders, Mr Khan said that the only deal in which he is now interested is holding of free and transparent elections.

He said the prevailing mindset of the power corridors is harmful for the country and the election is for “real freedom”.

The former prime minister said he has applied to cast the vote through the postal ballot.

He said Section 144 has been imposed after he had asked the PTI candidates to hold large-scale public meetings.

He expressed apprehensions that the government would not allow PTI candidates to hold their show of power.

The former prime minister claimed that the PML-N supreme leader Nawaz Sharif is behind the imposition of Section 144, as he has failed to bring out people in his public meetings.

He said the PTI has devised a contingency plan and in case any candidate is arrested or barred from contesting elections, his replacement would do so.

IHC bench reserves judgement

In a related development, a division bench of the Islamabad High Court (IHC) comprising Chief Justice Aamer Farooq and Justice Tariq Mehmood Jahangiri reserved its decision on two petitions of Imran Khan against his trial at Adiala Jail in Toshakhana and 190m pound corruption cases.

Mr Khan’s counsel Shoaib Shaheen said the notification had been issued in violation of relevant laws.

He pointed out that earlier another division bench of the IHC had scrapped court proceedings while observing flaws in the issuance of the notification for the jail trial.

Attorney General Awan told the court that the matter before the other bench was not identical.

He said the government has completed all codal formalities for the former prime minister’s trial in jail.

Contempt proceedings puts off

In another development, the Election Commission of Pakistan agreed not to proceed with contempt of the ECP and the chief election commissioner against Imran Khan until the Feb 8 general elections.

A four-member ECP bench, headed by its Sindh member Nisar Ahmed Durrani, heard the case. Advocate Shoaib Shaheen appeared before the bench on behalf of the former prime minister, while Faisal Fareed represented former PTI leader Fawad Chaudhry.

“Statements of witnesses were to be recorded today,” reminded Mr Durrani when PTI founder’s lawyer said he had applied for adjournment of the case due to elections.

Mr Shaheen, who is also the party’s independent candidate from an NA seat of Islamabad, urged the bench to adjourn the case hearing till after elections.

“This hearing is giving an impression that the Election Commission of Pakistan is facilitating one political party while targeting another,” Shoaib Shaheen said. To this, Justice retired Ikramullah Khan, who is the commission’s member from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, made it clear that the ECP has no inclination towards any political party.

Replying to him, the PTI founder’s lawyer pointed out that Section 144 has been imposed in Punjab, but the ECP member emphasised that such matters pertained to the administration and they have nothing to do with the Commission. “What could the Election Commission do if a terrorist enters the rally?” he asked.

The lawyer then referred to a recent ECP order about PTI intra-party polls, adding that the commission took away PTI’s poll symbol ahead of the general polls.

“People know PTI founding member. What is the importance of ‘bat’,” retired Justice Ikramullah asked.

“Posters in every constituency of Islamabad have big pictures of the PTI founder,” he remarked.

The lawyer expressed the party’s readiness to hold intra-party elections afresh and remarked: “We are ready to hold intra-party elections again under the supervision of the Election Commission of Pakistan. The party has been dissolved for five years by denying the poll symbol to it.”

The ECP member retorted that the case has been in limbo for more than a year, when the lawyer urged that statements of witnesses should be recorded after Feb 15. The hearing was then adjourned till Feb 20.

Regarding the contempt case against Fawad Chaudhry, his lawyer Faisal Chaudhry requested for adjournment of the hearing, to which, ECP member from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa pointed out that no reply has been submitted by Fawad Chaudhry on the show-cause notice till date.

The lawyer still insisted for more time to submit reply to the show-cause notice and was given time till Feb 21 to do the needful. The lawyer submitted written request for the issuance of the production order of Fawad Chaudhry, saying that the trial should be conducted in his presence and maintained that trial is not conducted in the absence of an accused.

Mr Durrani of the ECP said that the production order would be issued only if needed, and that an order would be issued in this context.

 
Elections are happening tomorrow. Hope that its not totally rigged. Otherwise another chaos incoming for Pakistan.
 
That is something I am expecting tomorrow but let's see what happens. I think the ECP may not extend the polling time tomorrow as they too are part of establishment's schemes
Of course it is set up. there will be rigging as well. But an overwehlming turnout can negate any rigging.
 
Gonna be a good election tomr.

The rona dhona has started from PTI fans already
 
We the Pakistanis will have the power to vote and decide who we want tomr.
 
We the Pakistanis will have the power to vote and decide who we want tomr.

What power, in the other threads you said that these elections will be rigged, so how does your vote matter when the winner has already been decided?
 
ur prediction?

which party going to get max seats?
lt would be interesting how the pti independants do and whether the voters turn out in high number and vote for the correct independant.

Its basically PMLN vs PTI independants.

JI can give a fight.
 
What power, in the other threads you said that these elections will be rigged, so how does your vote matter when the winner has already been decided?
if PTI wins tomr, we all know the u turn that you lot from take from rigging to being the most fair elections ever.
 
Infact it would be the fairest election if it results in PTI majority.
see the issue?

You guys think merit exist only when results favor you, but if it goes other way around you call it cheating. There is no where it is written that it should favor you.

This is what happened in 2018, PMLN was expected to win, all the rona dhona by pti fans one night before and when Imran won the next day, PTI fans were soo excited and called it the fairest elections to ever take place.

Even you just admitted that you guys will take a u-turn when the results favor u.
 
if PTI wins tomr, we all know the u turn that you lot from take from rigging to being the most fair elections ever.

Whether PTI wins or not, the elections will be rigged, they’ve always been rigged. They were rigged in 2018, some say in favour of PTI and some say in favour of PMLN.

You know Nawaz will win, the people outside of Pakistan (non Pakistanis) who have zero knowledge on Pakistani politics knows who’ll win.

Your vote means nothing, and it never will until the establishment stops interfering.
 
One thing is for sure tomr, the results will be rigged enough that no one gets a complete majority.

PMLN will win seats and PTI independents will win seats in such a way that they will be confused with whom to join. PTI cannot form a govt or opposition alone as there candidates are independents and have to join the party that are contesting the election.

So now it would be PMLN Vs PPP VS JI (With PTI candidates joining them)

Even if PTI wins more seats than any other party, they will still need to join some other party.

I think tomr JI is going to surprise us the most and win seats.
 
Whether PTI wins or not, the elections will be rigged, they’ve always been rigged. They were rigged in 2018, some say in favour of PTI and some say in favour of PMLN.

You know Nawaz will win, the people outside of Pakistan (non Pakistanis) who have zero knowledge on Pakistani politics knows who’ll win.

Your vote means nothing, and it never will until the establishment stops interfering.
thank you for admitting 2018 was rigged.

If a vote is casted correctly, that vote cannot be cancelled out or be rigged in someone else favor. So vote does matter.
 
see the issue?

You guys think merit exist only when results favor you, but if it goes other way around you call it cheating. There is no where it is written that it should favor you.

This is what happened in 2018, PMLN was expected to win, all the rona dhona by pti fans one night before and when Imran won the next day, PTI fans were soo excited and called it the fairest elections to ever take place.

Even you just admitted that you guys will take a u-turn when the results favor u.
Its not a U turn all surveys suggest so
 
Meanwhile PTI is very desperate that they never boycotted the election :))
 
One thing is for sure tomr, the results will be rigged enough that no one gets a complete majority.

PMLN will win seats and PTI independents will win seats in such a way that they will be confused with whom to join. PTI cannot form a govt or opposition alone as there candidates are independents and have to join the party that are contesting the election.

So now it would be PMLN Vs PPP VS JI (With PTI candidates joining them)

Even if PTI wins more seats than any other party, they will still need to join some other party.

I think tomr JI is going to surprise us the most and win seats.
Why don’t you decide first which is it. Will it be rigged or not. In one post, you write this will be a good election. PTI supporters have started rona dhona already. In another you state it will be rigged. So which one is it?

According to you it’s a good election if it’s rigged so no one party has majority? Or it’s good if it’s only rigged so the party you support wins?

My take is it’s always rigged by the establishment whether completely or partially and the rigging doesn’t just include incorrect vote counting or votes. They employ all methods to make sure they, the army establishment, have their way.

So this rona dhona is completely justified and quite frankly you should participate in it too and condemn these practices.
 
Why don’t you decide first which is it. Will it be rigged or not. In one post, you write this will be a good election. PTI supporters have started rona dhona already. In another you state it will be rigged. So which one is it?

According to you it’s a good election if it’s rigged so no one party has majority? Or it’s good if it’s only rigged so the party you support wins?

My take is it’s always rigged by the establishment whether completely or partially and the rigging doesn’t just include incorrect vote counting or votes. They employ all methods to make sure they, the army establishment, have their way.

So this rona dhona is completely justified and quite frankly you should participate in it too and condemn these practices.

Why are you wasting your time?
If you want to have a debate, you won't get one from a PMLN/PPP supporter because they don't have a leg to stand on.
 
Meanwhile PTI is very desperate that they never boycotted the election :))
Even the kaffir show more morals in their governance than these criminals. At the heart of my belief is that if we do wrong onto others, Allah will punish us. I hope you understand
 
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Can 120 million registered voters come out and prove their hubne watani nature and defeat the establishment?
 
The Western Powers i.e. USA, UK have a long time decided they will not accept IK as PM at any costs and have instructed the Pak army to ensure the same. Will the votes of 120 million people count?
 
None of the elections were that controversial than the current one. Imran was right, the elections will be a farce. We might see some surprises as well but the majority of the time, it is gonna be comical stuff when the results start to roll out in the evening.
 
Over three hundred tablets given to the Khyber Pakhtunkha department for data collection have gone missing, presumably through theft.

The tablets had been used in the digital census as well as the general election. The devices went missing from the District Education Office in Peshawar.

The DEP has ordered an inquiry into the matter and a three-member committee has been constituted to investigate the affair and submit a report.

The report will be submitted in one week.

The previous census was billed as the first digital one in Pakistan’s history. Tablets had been issued to census workers who went door to door to collect data.

The digital devices were intended to speed up the process of data colelction and organisation as well as making the whole process alot more smoother.

The census also became the basis for the delimiations that were used in the general elections of 2024.



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