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Pakistan's Main Opposition Party Calls for Investigation Into Election 'Rigging'

The EU and US were both critical of the political climate in the run-up to the vote, saying that some parties had been disadvantaged.
Mubasher Bukhari
Jul 30 2018
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The EU and US were both critical of the political climate in the run-up to the vote, saying that some parties had been disadvantaged.
Supporters of Shehbaz Sharif, brother of ousted prime minister Nawaz Sharif and leader of Pakistan Muslim League -Nawaz (PML-N), chant slogans against what they say is alleged rigging by the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) during the general election, in Karachi, Pakistan July 28, 2018. Credit: Reuters/Akhtar Soomro
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Lahore: Pakistan's main opposition party called on Sunday for a judicial investigation into what it said was rigging at an election that it lost this week.

Imran Khan's Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI), or Pakistan Movement for Justice, emerged as the largest single party in Wednesday's vote, defeating the Pakistan Muslim League - Nawaz (PML-N), party of jailed former prime minister Nawaz Sharif.

During the campaign, Sharif said that the military had influenced the judiciary to deny him a second term. The military denied this. It has ruled Pakistan for about half the time since the country's formation in 1947.

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"We demand constitution of a judicial commission to probe incidents that took place on July 25," senior party leader Khawaja Asif told reporters in Lahore. "We will issue a white paper on election rigging and other incidents."

"PML-N will not accept these elections as legitimate and we are ready to ... start a movement along with other parties," Mushahid Ullah Khan, a senior leader, told reporters.

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PTI did better than expected, winning 16.86 million votes and beating PML-N, which got nearly 13 million votes. PTI opened coalition talks with at least one smaller party and independent politicians on Saturday.

EU observers were critical of the political climate in the run-up to the vote, saying that some parties had been disadvantaged. The US voiced similar concerns.

"Pakistan witnessed the most disputed elections in the country's history," Ahsan Iqbal, a senior leader of PML-N and former interior minister, told reporters.

Sharif was taken to a hospital in Islamabad on Sunday with a possible heart problem, said both, a government official and Sharif's party.

Sharif and his daughter Maryam were arrested on July 13, minutes after they returned from Britain to revitalise their flagging PML-N party ahead of the July 25 election.

An anti-corruption court sentenced Sharif on July 6 to ten years while his daughter and political heir was sentenced to seven years over the purchase of luxury flats in London in the 1990s.

They were moved to Adiala jail in the garrison town of Rawalpindi.

"After initially refusing to be shifted to Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences ... Sharif agrees to be treated outside prison after consulting with his personal doctor," said a PML-N tweet on Sunday night.

"Doctors at Adiala jail have observed changes in the ECG of Nawaz Sharif," Punjab chief minister Hasan Askari Rizvi told Reuters. An ECG checks the heart's electrical activity.

"We cannot take any risk about Sharif's health," said Rizvi.

(Reuters)

This article went live on July thirtieth, two thousand eighteen, at twenty minutes past one in the afternoon.

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