PESHAWAR: Leaders of different factions in Peshawar say that they have received threats in an environment where fear and terrorist attacks have already affected political activities in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province.
Speaking to Arab News on Wednesday, Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) leader, Arbab Khizer Hayat, said that he had received a threatening phone call in which the caller told him to restrict his political activities.
“The man on the phone said that it was better for me to stop my election campaign,” he said. “The caller also wanted me to stop supporting my political party.”
Hayat added that he had informed the local police about the threat but had not received any response.
Arbab Najeebullah, a Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal (MMA) candidate running for the National Assembly from NA-30, said that he received threatening phone calls from unidentified people who sought money from him.
“I don’t know who made the phone call, but it was clear from the country code that the call came from Afghanistan. It seems that the people making the call were using a foreign SIM card. It’s hard for me to tell if they were locals or Afghanistan-based,” he added.
Another candidate, Nighat Aurakzai of the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP), also said that she had received several calls in which she was asked to scale down her election campaign.
“I often criticize Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) and the Taliban on social media. The callers asked me to stop making such statements. I believe that everyone who criticizes these entities receives such threatening calls these days.”
Aurakzai, who is also the president of PPP’s women’s wing in KP, added: “The callers used Afghan and Saudi SIM cards. I think that they must have brought them from abroad to make such threatening phone calls here. I won’t be surprised if the culprits are local.”
The PPP leader complained that her party was not getting a level playing field in the 2018 elections. “It seems that only the PTI is free to run its election activities,” she said. “I consider it part of pre-poll rigging.”
Radesh Singh Tony, a candidate belonging to a minority religious community contesting a general seat for the KP assembly, also claimed to have received death threats to withdraw from the race.
“My family members are worried,” he said, “and they are forcing me to stop my election campaign.”
Tony, an independent candidate, is contesting from PK-75 against PTI’s Malik Wajidullah, ANP’s Aqil Shah (a former provincial minister), MMA’s Arbab Umar Farooq, PPP’s Misbahuddin, PML-N’s Qamar Zaman, among others.
Prof. Dr. Sarfaraz Khan, who works for Peshawar University, said that such threats were part of pre-poll rigging.
“Some parties like ANP, PPP and PML-N have been pushed against the wall, while PTI is free to run its campaign. This is a new form of political tyranny,” he said.
Khan also said that political activities had been negatively affected due to the threats and fear of terrorist attacks in KP, adding that people had been avoiding election rallies and political campaigns.
Superintendent of Police of Peshawar City Kaukab Farooq said that his department was looking into the phone calls. “Meanwhile, we have warned all political parties to hold their election activities in areas that are surrounded by walls. That makes it easier for us to ensure their safety since we can protect the entry points and our team members can frisk visitors before allowing them into the venue,” he said.
Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP) Tahir Dawar told Arab News that investigations in such cases take time.
Commenting on the use of foreign SIM cards to make threats, he said: “The KP police have maintained a database of all those numbers used by militants from Afghanistan in the past. In many such cases, local facilitators of those making phone calls from Afghanistan were also arrested. This explains why they are no longer able to bomb houses or cause much damage, which they used to do relatively easily in the past.”