May 11, 2013

PAKISTANIS VOTE AS VIOLENCE MARS END OF VIBRANT CAMPAIGN

[The election has evoked a rare sense of enthusiasm for politics in Pakistan. Some 4,670 candidates are fighting for 272 directly elected seats in the national parliament, while almost 11,000 people are battling for the four provincial assemblies. Aside from more traditional politicians, candidates included astrologers, transgenders, former models and the first female candidates in the tribal belt along the Afghan border.]
Muhammed Muheisen/Associated Press
Women line up to enter a polling station on the outskirts of Islamabad,  Pakistan, on Saturday.
LAHORE, Pakistan – Pakistanis went to the polls for a historic election on Saturday, their excitement mingled with trepidation as the country marked a democratic milestone with a riveting electoral contest that was threatened by fresh violence from Taliban insurgents.
A bomb in the southern port of Karachi killed at least 11 people, doctors said, offering an ominous start to the day following Taliban threats to dispatch suicide bombers to selected targets across the country. At least 17 people have been killed in the violence, which included a gunfight and an attack on a polling station in the western province of Balochistan, and two explosions in the northwest, including Peshawar, that left several people injured.
The attack in Karachi appeared directed at a candidate from the Awami National Party, one of three secular-leaning parties that have borne the brunt of Taliban attacks in the last month that have killed at least 110 people.
But in several cities the early turnout was strong, supporting predictions of unusually high voter participation in a triangular contest that is dominated by the battle between Nawaz Sharif, a former prime minister, and Imran Khan, a sports star turned political phenomenon.
The election is Pakistan’s 10th since 1970 but only the first where a civilian government has served a full five-year term and is poised to peacefully hand power to another political administration.
It is also the election that has seen the least amount of interference from the country’s military. While army generals have ruled Pakistan directly for more than half its 66-year history, and indirectly most of the rest of the time, this time the military has largely steered clear of getting involved in the election.
There have been few allegations of manipulation by the military’s Inter Services-Intelligence Directorate, which in previous elections had bribed or intimidated candidates to obtain a result favorable to the military leadership.
Instead the country has been gripped by election fever in recent weeks, most of it driven by the contest between Mr. Sharif and Mr. Khan. Although Mr. Sharif’s Pakistan Muslim League-N party is favored to win the highest number of seats, it is unlikely to gain a majority thanks to an aggressive challenge from Mr. Khan in Punjab province.
Mr. Khan electrified the campaign in recent weeks with a series of mass rallies that tapped into a deep vein of support among young and middle-class Pakistanis in urban areas. Public sympathy for the former cricket star rose after he fell nearly 15 feet during a rally on Tuesday night, injuring his back.
Two nights later Mr. Khan delivered his final campaign address, speaking from his hospital bed via video link, to a crowd of frenzied supporters in central Islamabad. His success in today’s poll will depend partly on his ability to persuade young voters - 25 million Pakistanis under the age of 30 are eligible to vote - to stand in line in the summer heat and cast their votes.
The election results will also have implications for the United States, which is enjoying a lull in its previously stormy relationship with Pakistan in recent years.
Mr. Sharif, a conservative and a steel baron, came to American attention in 1999 during a tense, confrontation with India that averted the possibility of a nuclear conflict thanks to mediation by President Bill Clinton.
A nationalist by inclination, on the campaign trail Mr. Sharif hinted that he would seek to redraw Pakistan’s relationship with America and negotiate with Taliban rebels, but offered few specifics.
Mr. Khan, however, has more defined ideas: he has vowed to end C.I.A. drone strikes in Pakistan’s tribal belt by ordering the Pakistani military to shoot down American aircraft if necessary, and he believes that the state should negotiate with Taliban insurgents, not fight them.
The election has evoked a rare sense of enthusiasm for politics in Pakistan. Some 4,670 candidates are fighting for 272 directly elected seats in the national parliament, while almost 11,000 people are battling for the four provincial assemblies. Aside from more traditional politicians, candidates included astrologers, transgenders, former models and the first female candidates in the tribal belt along the Afghan border.
Also standing for election are dozens of candidates from Sunni sectarian groups, some with links to violent attacks on minority Shiites.
But the sense of a vibrant, if imperfect, democracy has been tempered by Taliban attacks throughout the campaigning, which suggest that the Islamist movement has moved beyond its image as a nihilistic guerrilla movement, based principally in the mountainous northwest, to a political insurgent group with firmly shaped objectives to upend western-style democracy in Pakistan.
In a statement on Friday, the Taliban leader Hakimullah Mehsud ordered his commanders to attack the “infidel system” of democracy, warning that teams of suicide bombers would hit targets across the country.
The police established new checkposts and military helicopters patrolled the skies in Peshawar, the northwestern city that has been worst hit by militant violence. Hospital staff were put on alert while billboard signs across the city asked citizens to be vigilant in watching for suspicious activity.
But after a slow start to polling, large numbers of voters emerged by mid morning, including many women. About 300 burka-clad women stood in line outside the Lady Griffith High School, where policemen warned photographers not to take their picture.
One of the women, Saba Iqbal, a 35-year-old doctor, said she was going to vote for Mr. Khan’s Pakistan Tehrik-i-Insaaf party.
“I never voted before but this time I want to be part of Imran Khan’s change,” she said.
Campaigning was further marred on Thursday when Ali Haider Gilani, the 27-year-old son of former prime minister Yousaf Raza Gilani, was shot and kidnapped by unidentified gunmen as he addressed a campaign event in the city of Multan, in southern Punjab Province.
Two guards who tried to protect Mr. Gilani were shot dead; the candidate was reportedly left bleeding from a gunshot wound as he was dragged into a vehicle and driven away.
President Asif Ali Zardari’s Pakistan Peoples Party, which led the last government, has found itself badly overshadowed in the race following a lackluster and leaderless campaign that was further marred by the Taliban threats.
The party had developed a poor reputation for governance as the economy has faltered in recent years and ministers failed to reverse crippling power shortages that have caused misery in homes and hardship for industrialists. On Saturday, there were signs that voters may punish even party stalwarts for their failings.
In the Gujar Khan district, in northern Punjab province, former prime minister Raja Pervez Ashraf faced a tough fight against Raja Javed Akhlas, a contender from Mr. Sharif’s party. During his time in power, Mr. Ashraf poured tens of millions of dollars into the district through new roads, underpasses and gas connections for constituents – staples of the patronage politics that characterize traditional politics here.
Emerging from his palatial home, Mr. Ashraf cast his vote in a nearby polling station as supporters waved flags and Mr. Ashraf’s wife offered a prayer. But in Gujjar Khan town, the district centre, many voters appeared disillusioned with his record.
“I hate Raja,” said Muhammad Ishfaq, a 53-year-old businessman and father of four, who went on to make a series of corruption allegations against Mr. Ashraf. “I feel Nawaz Sharif is the right person,” he said.
Salman Masood contributed reporting from Gujar Khan and Ihsanullah Tipu Mehsud contributed from Peshawar.