PTI announces boycott of upcoming AJK elections amid recent unrest
Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) on Thursday announced that it would not participate in the upcoming Azad Jammu and Kashmir (AJK) elections, saying the decision was taken in solidarity with the people of the region and in line with what it described as its "principled stance" under the prevailing circumstances.
The announcement came as the situation in AJK remained tense after the government banned the Joint Awami Action Committee (JAAC), with the group continuing its sit-in and vowing to sustain the protest until its "legitimate demands" are met.
"Expressing unwavering solidarity with the aspirations of the people of Azad Jammu and Kashmir, their right to self-determination, and their democratic rights, Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf has decided not to participate in the elections under the prevailing circumstances," the party's Central Information Secretary Sheikh Waqas Akram said in a statement posted on X.
He said the decision was not a political strategy but an expression of solidarity with the Kashmiri people and a principled stance.
PTI said AJK was passing through a "severe crisis", claiming that thousands of people in Rawalakot and other areas were staging sit-ins in support of what it described as their legitimate demands.
The party alleged that several people had lost their lives as a result of the use of force by the authorities and claimed that the supply of essential goods from Punjab to AJK had been completely halted, causing hardship for residents.
"Instead of pushing the Kashmiri people toward further political instability in such circumstances, their issues should be resolved immediately and justly," the statement said.
Read: AJK police arrests JAAC leader Shaukat Nawaz Mir amid sit-in
PTI further claimed that the prevailing situation was harming the constitutional, democratic and political identity of AJK and creating an environment that was eroding what it described as the distinction between AJK and Indian-occupied Jammu and Kashmir.
The party also said the approach was detrimental to Pakistan's historical Kashmir policy.
According to the statement, the electoral process could not be considered credible while, it alleged, representative voices were being suppressed, political activists were facing action, leaders were being arrested, media restrictions were in place, and freedom of expression was being curtailed.
"Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf will not engage in the politics of power by ignoring the voice of the Kashmiri people. Our primary priority is to support the fundamental rights of the Kashmiri people, their democratic demands, and a politics based on justice. We will stand with the people, not participate in elections."
The party said it would not participate in the elections until the situation returned to normal, concerns raised by political and public stakeholders were addressed, the issues of the Joint Awami Action Committee (JAAC) were resolved through mutual understanding, the election schedule was reviewed, and all political parties were provided with what it described as a genuinely free and level playing field.
PTI said its political campaign would instead focus on advocating for the democratic rights of the Kashmiri people, supporting their demands and seeking what it called a just resolution of the JAAC's demands.
The party also announced the immediate suspension of all recommendations made by the AJK Parliamentary Board regarding the allocation of party tickets to candidates.
Also Read: TTAP says police stopped AJK-bound delegation
It said no further progress would be made on the issuance of tickets or any stage of the electoral process until the situation normalised, the political environment was restored, and the party took further decisions.
"This decision of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf has not been made based on any calculation of political gain or loss but in accordance with the expression of solidarity with the Kashmiri people, respect for democratic values, and the demands of principled politics. Until a free, fair, and peaceful political environment is ensured for the Kashmiri people, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf will not participate in this electoral process."
Background
The recent unrest and deadly clashes broke out in areas, including Rawalakot, where the JAAC had been holding a sit-in outside the Combined Military Hospital Rawalakot. AJK police allege that armed JAAC members opened fire on deployed law enforcement in a planned attack, leaving four personnel dead and around 20 injured. JAAC, however, disputes this account, claiming security forces used tear gas and fired shells toward the hospital.
According to the AJK police, three individuals linked to the JAAC and four law enforcement personnel were killed during the protests. JAAC, however, said in a statement that seven individuals were killed and dozens were injured when street firing was carried out in the dark after electricity was allegedly cut off.
The clash came as the AJK government and the JAAC witnessed a face-off, as the election date for AJK was announced for July 27.
AJK's 53-member legislative assembly includes 12 seats reserved for Kashmiri refugees — people who fled Indian-controlled Kashmir in 1947 and 1965 and are now scattered across Pakistan. Six seats represent refugees from the Jammu division (~434,000 people) and six from the Kashmir Valley (~30,000 people) — an already lopsided arrangement that many see as unfair.
The region witnessed one of its most turbulent periods in October last year when protests led by the JAAC erupted over demands for constitutional and governance reforms. At least nine people, including three policemen, were killed during the unrest.
The JAAC, which organised the protests and strike, had presented a wide-ranging charter of demands, including an end to the privileges enjoyed by the ruling elite, the abolition of 12 assembly seats reserved for refugees, and the scrapping of the quota system.
Two days after the violence, the government and the JAAC reached an agreement covering 12 core and 13 additional points. Under the accord, both sides agreed to constitute a high-level committee to examine the issue of refugee seats in the AJK Legislative Assembly.