Prime Minister Anwaarul Haq Kakar has said Free and fair elections were possible without PTI Chairman Imran Khan, who is currently incarcerated in a graft case, and his party leaders jailed following violent riots in the country on 9th May.
However, the premier also stated that thousands of PTI members, who were not a part of “unlawful activities”, “will be running the political process” and “will be participating in the elections”.
His statement comes days after the Election Commission of Pakistan finally announced that polls in the country would be held in January next year. Major political parties in the country have now begun preparations for elections.
In an interview with the Associated Press over the weekend, PM Kakar dismissed the possibility of the military establishment manipulating the election results to ensure the PTI doesn’t win as “absolutely absurd”.
He said the ECP would conduct the vote, adding that the chief election commissioner was appointed by Imran himself, so “why would he turn in any sense of the word against him?”
In response to a question on whether he would recommend the judiciary to overturn Imran’s conviction and enable him to run in the elections, the prime minister said he wouldn’t interfere with decisions by the judiciary and stressed the judiciary should not be used “as a tool for any political ends”.
“We are not pursuing anyone on a personal vendetta. But yes, we will ensure that the law is appropriate. If anyone, be it Imran Khan or any other politician violates, in terms of their political behavior, the laws of the country, then the restoration of the law has to be ensured. We cannot equate that with … political discrimination,” he said.
Talking about PTI allegations pertaining to “threats to democracy” and “de facto military rule in Pakistan”, the PM said the claims were “part and parcel of our political culture”.
He said his government’s working relationship with the military was “very smooth” as well as “very open and candid”.
“We do have challenges of civil-military relationships, I’m not denying that,” he said, “but there are very different reasons for the imbalance”.
According to PM Kakar, the solution was to gradually improve the performance of the civilian institutions “rather than weakening the current military organization, because that’s not going to solve any of our problems.”
The premier also stated that when the ECP would announce the exact date for elections, his government would provide all kinds of financial, security, and other assistance for the polls.
PTI says polls without Imran are ‘unacceptable’:
Meanwhile, in a statement issued today, the PTI said any elections without Imran would be “unacceptable, unlawful, and unconstitutional”.
“The caretaker prime minister’s statement is a manifestation of the insensitivity found in the state structure regarding the Constitution, democracy and national interests,” it stated, noting that the PTI was the “largest” political party of Pakistan and Imran was Pakistan’s most popular leader.