Published on 12:00 AM, February 09, 2024

‘Vote matters’ despite alleged rigging

Pakistanis turned out early for election said they believe their votes count, despite allegations of rigging in the nation's most fractious poll in recent history.

"I believe in democracy and I think my vote matters," said 22-year-old psychology student Haleema Shafiq, among the first to vote in the capital Islamabad.

"I cast my vote as it's my duty," she told AFP inside a polling station. "I wish for a deserving party to come to power."

Polls opened at 8:00 am (0300 GMT) for 128 million eligible voters, with the first participants trickling into the Noorpur Shahan girl's school and inking their fingers before stamping papers in gender-segregated booths.

Early voters were outnumbered by around a dozen armed security personnel staffing the station, a day after twin blasts claimed by the Islamic State group killed 28 outside candidate offices in the nation's southwest.

A Hindu woman votes as others wait in a queue at a polling station during a general election, in Tando Allahyar, Sindh, Pakistan yesterday. PHOTO: REUTERS, AFP

"I want a government that can make Pakistan safe for girls," said Shafiq.

Analysts predict a low turnout after a muted campaign overshadowed by the jailing of ex-prime minister Imran Khan and the hobbling of his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party by the military establishment.

"Is this the way an election should be conducted?" asked 40-year-old Imran Khan, a driver who shares his name with the jailed opposition leader.

"Everyone has the right to vote according to their own will," he said. "Today is not the day to stay at home. Those who choose to sit at home today will do injustice to themselves."

Monitors say the treatment of PTI amounts to "pre-poll rigging", and the party has voiced fears that voters would face interference at polling stations.

In a nation where nearly 40 percent of adults are illiterate, the ballot papers featured symbols associated with different parties, varying from a tiger to an arrow and a set of scales.

Election officials count ballot papers after polls close at a polling station in Lahore. Pollsters predicted a low turnout from the country’s 128 million eligible voters following a lacklustre campaign overshadowed by the jailing of former prime minister Imran Khan, and the hobbling of his PTI party by the military-led establishment. PHOTO: REUTERS, AFP

A Supreme Court decision stripped PTI of the right to use their cricket bat symbol, which alluded to the charismatic Khan's star sporting career.

As a result, PTI's selected candidates are running as independents with a hodge-podge of symbols on ballot papers ranging from eggplants to bottles.

Analysts have said it's one more hurdle being used to disconnect PTI from their voter base. Ballots were posted into white and green boxes, Pakistan's national colours, and crowds steadily grew in the first hour after polls opened.