In Islamabad: Voters report harassment by PML-N supporters
PTI supporters allege polling station set up in Golra Sharif in order to rig polls in favour of PML-N candidate.
RAWALPINDI/ISLAMABAD:
Allegations of poll rigging were rife in some areas of the twin cities of Rawalpindi and Islamabad, as it was reported that workers of certain political parties were using various methods to influence the outcome.
Electoral lists at some polling stations mysteriously disappeared, while voters were also misguided by workers of rival candidates. The youth, many of whom were first-time voters, were a prime target for misinformation, as were the elderly.
The Pakistan Tehreek-I-Insaf alleged that both PML-N and JI workers were actively misguiding PTI supporters at several polling stations.
Deviating from the standard procedure of setting up a polling station for 700 to 1,000 voters, the Election Commission of Pakistan established a polling station in Golra Sharif in Islamabad to accommodate as many as 6,000 voters. In every sub-sector of the main sectors of Islamabad, there were three to four polling stations, but residents of sectors E-11/1, 2 and E-11/3 and of adjacent suburbs had to cast their vote at the Golra polling station, next to the home of PML-N candidate Anjum Aqeel Khan, who won the 2008 elections from the same constituency (NA-48).
According to female PTI voters in NA-48, some burqa-clad female supporters of PML-N blocked PTI voters waiting in the queue from going inside the station. They alleged that the polling station was set up in Golra with the intention of making it easier for the PML-N to rig the polls.
“At certain times, when our voters reached at the door of the polling station, the PML-N workers tore down the chits they had obtained from outside inscribed with the serial number of our electoral number,” said Atika Afzal, a supporter of PTI.
“The presiding officer did not have the voters’ lists. It is 3:00pm now and I have been waiting here since 9:00am but the list still hasn’t come. Polling was stopped for one hour because the presiding officer was asking voters whom they are going to vote for,” said Saima Bukhari, a resident of Gulrez.
Senior Superintendent Police Operation Mujahid Akbar ordered police officers to arrest those who were asking voters who they would vote for, but it is unclear whether any arrests were actually made.
Published in The Express Tribune, May 12th, 2013.
Allegations of poll rigging were rife in some areas of the twin cities of Rawalpindi and Islamabad, as it was reported that workers of certain political parties were using various methods to influence the outcome.
Electoral lists at some polling stations mysteriously disappeared, while voters were also misguided by workers of rival candidates. The youth, many of whom were first-time voters, were a prime target for misinformation, as were the elderly.
The Pakistan Tehreek-I-Insaf alleged that both PML-N and JI workers were actively misguiding PTI supporters at several polling stations.
Deviating from the standard procedure of setting up a polling station for 700 to 1,000 voters, the Election Commission of Pakistan established a polling station in Golra Sharif in Islamabad to accommodate as many as 6,000 voters. In every sub-sector of the main sectors of Islamabad, there were three to four polling stations, but residents of sectors E-11/1, 2 and E-11/3 and of adjacent suburbs had to cast their vote at the Golra polling station, next to the home of PML-N candidate Anjum Aqeel Khan, who won the 2008 elections from the same constituency (NA-48).
According to female PTI voters in NA-48, some burqa-clad female supporters of PML-N blocked PTI voters waiting in the queue from going inside the station. They alleged that the polling station was set up in Golra with the intention of making it easier for the PML-N to rig the polls.
“At certain times, when our voters reached at the door of the polling station, the PML-N workers tore down the chits they had obtained from outside inscribed with the serial number of our electoral number,” said Atika Afzal, a supporter of PTI.
“The presiding officer did not have the voters’ lists. It is 3:00pm now and I have been waiting here since 9:00am but the list still hasn’t come. Polling was stopped for one hour because the presiding officer was asking voters whom they are going to vote for,” said Saima Bukhari, a resident of Gulrez.
Senior Superintendent Police Operation Mujahid Akbar ordered police officers to arrest those who were asking voters who they would vote for, but it is unclear whether any arrests were actually made.
Published in The Express Tribune, May 12th, 2013.