ISLAMABAD: The clamour over alleged election rigging refuses to die down. On Sunday, the Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) and Balochistan National Party-Mengal (BNP-M) agreed to raise the issue and jointly demand a detailed, in-depth investigation into what they claimed the theft of their mandate on May 11 by candidates of rival parties.
PTI chairman Imran Khan and BNP-M chief Sardar Akhtar Mengal, who led a four-member delegation of his party, met at the former’s residence in Banigala to discuss their plan.
According to sources, they decided to meet again, after Mr Khan’s visit to the UK where he will be staying till July 24, to further discuss how to effectively raise their demand for investigation.
The PTI chief is leaving for London on Monday for a medical check-up and to spend some time with his sons.
A PTI leader told Dawn the two leaders had agreed to join hands to keep the issue of rigging alive until the Election Commission took corrective measures.
“The PTI doesn’t want to derail the democratic dispensation but rectification of the voting procedures will boost voters’ confidence in democracy,” Mr Khan was quoted as saying.
Mr Mengal said the two parties also wanted local government elections held in time and steps taken by the ECP to avoid a repetition of mismanagement which had marred the general elections. The ECP, he said, should seriously take notice of their complaints.
While the PTI has demanded biometric-based re-count of votes in four National Assembly constituencies, the BNP-M wants re-checking of votes cast for its candidates in Balochistan. The two parties have held protest rallies, criticising ECP’s failure to conduct free and fair elections.
The BNP-M has won one National Assembly and two Balochistan Assembly seats.
The NA constituencies where the PTI claimed its candidates were in winning position in the initial vote count, but declared runners-up in official results include NA 125 and 122 in Lahore, NA 154 (Lodhran) and NA 57 (Attock). The NA 122 was won by Speaker Ayaz Sadiq with a lead of around 9,000 votes. This was the only seat Mr Khan lost out of the four he had contested.
The PTI media wing said the two leaders had agreed that suitable changes in the electoral process was the only way to ensure that people’s will was truly reflected.
They shared their reservations over the conduct of ECP and electoral staff and stressed the need for introducing changes in the system to establish credibility of the election process.
“Both the leaders observed that ample evidence of corruption in the electoral process has been properly registered across the country on the basis of which the authorities should respond properly,” the PTI said.
The two parties agreed that the lingering issue of missing persons and ever-deteriorating law and order situation needed immediate attention to make Balochistan an equally prosperous part of the federation.
PRESS CONFERENCE: The PTI had announced that the party’s chief would address an important press conference in the afternoon, but it was cancelled at the eleventh hour. According Dr Shireen Mazari, the spokesperson for the party, the cancellation was necessitated by an overloaded schedule of meetings over the past couple of days, because of which Mr Khan wasn’t feeling well.
CLARIFICATION: The PTI clarified that no rift existed among its top leaders as reported by the media.
The party said that neither Mr Khan had asked Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Chief Minister Parvez Khattak to leave the position of the party’s general secretary, nor was any such demand made by other leaders. Mr Khattak had won the party elections for the secretary general’s post.