Pakistan’s religious parties fail to leave mark in 2018 polls

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Supporters of Pakistani political Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) party hold party flags as they attend a campaign meeting ahead of the general election in Karachi on July 23, 2018. (AFP / ASIF HASSAN)
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Activists of the Jamiat Ulema-e Islam political party protest in Peshawar, Pakistan, on July 27, 2018 against alleged election rigging. (AFP / ABDUL MAJEED)
Updated 28 July 2018
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Pakistan’s religious parties fail to leave mark in 2018 polls

  • Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal (MMA), the alliance of mainstream religious parties formed to consolidate right-wing vote, failed to retain its position, according to latest polls
  • Such bigwigs as JUI-F chief Maulana Fazlur Rehman, Jamaat-e-Islami chief Sirajul Haq, and former Chief Minister Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) Akram Durrani were defeated by PTI candidates in their home constituencies

KARACHI: The mainstream religious-politico parties faced major setbacks in Pakistan’s general elections despite forging an alliance to consolidate the rightwing vote. 

Muttahida Majlis Amal (MMA) — an alliance of prominent mainstream religious parties including Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam-Fazal (JUI-F) and Jamat-e-Islami (JI) — did not even secure half the number of votes it got in the 2002 general elections. 

In the last elections, the MMA bagged 63 National Assembly seats, besides forming a government in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP). The alliance, however, only won 10 National Assembly seats this time, with 10 seats in KP, nine in Punjab, one in Sindh, and none from the largest Punjab province. 

In Karachi, where JI formed two city governments in the past and was always a runner-up to popular Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM), the party has moved much further down the list. The MMA only won one provincial assembly seat in the Lyari-PS-108 constituency of Karachi.

The major setback for the religious alliance, however, was in KP where its president Fazlur Rehman, Vice President Sirajul Haq, former Chief Minister Akram Khan Durrani failed even to win their native seats. 

Fazlur Rehman, who secured 45,457 votes from NA-38, was defeated by Ali Amin Khan of PTI who received 80,236 votes. In NA-39, though the margin is not as big as NA-38. Muhammad Yaqoob Sheikh of PTI defeated Fazlur Rehman with 55,110 votes. Fazlur Rehman got 40,760 votes in the constituency which saw the lowest turnout in Pakistan of 3.44 percent.

The JI chief Sirajul Haq, the second most important figure in the alliance, was defeated by PTI’s Muhammad Bashir Khan in Haq’s home constituency NA-7 by 16,977 votes. Durrani, who got 106,820 votes from his home constituency in Bannu — NA-35 — was defeated by PTI Chairman Imran Khan who won 113,822 votes. 

The MMA adopted a different approach by emphasizing civic issues on its campaign trail but could not win voters in the liberal PTI.

The Ahle Sunnat Wal Jamaat (ASWJ) and Milli Muslim League (MML) — the far right religious-politico parties — also failed to impress the electorate.

However, the newly formed Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP) secured a good number of votes, owing to its campaign exploiting religious sentiments in the matter of the blasphemy law.

The TLP, recently formed by Khadim Hussain Rizvi, a cleric widely known for his tirades and abusive language after the execution of Mumtaz Hussain Qadri, a police guard who killed former Governor Punjab Salman Taseer on Jan. 4, 2011, defeated Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, chairman Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) in NA-246 where Bhutto faced historical defeat. 
According to the official results issued by the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP), PTI’s Abdul Shakoor Shad secured the seat by bagging 52,750 (33.81 percent) votes. Bilawal Bhutto Zardari got 39,325 (19.30 percent) which was not enough to be runner-up. Ahmed Bakhsh of the TLP got 42,345 (20.85 percent) of the total number of votes.

In PS-107, which falls under the same constituency, Muhammad Younus Soomro of TLP got 26,248 votes and won the seat. The TLP also won a seat in a district west of Karachi.

From NA-247, one of the upscale Pakistani constituencies comprising Defense, Clifton and the downtown Saddar areas of the city, the TLP’s candidate got 24,680 and stood second in the race where highly rated candidates of the PPP, PSP, MQM, MMA and social activist Jibran Nasir were in the race. 

Although PTI candidate Dr. Arif Alvi won the seat from NA-24, analysts are surprised at TLP’s inroads in one of the city's liberal neighborhoods. The TLP got thousands of votes from each of the constituencies in which it was contesting, and stood, second, third and fourth in most of the constituencies where dozens were in the race.

Tabish Qayyum, a spokesman for Hafiz Saeed’s MML party, said his party was only looking at gains.

“Our initial goal was to be able to participate after constant delays and eventual refusal of enlistment. We were censored by the media, social media and there were constant notices from ECP hampering our campaign. We participated in these elections in a very complex situation, and with no previous history of vote bank; all we have is an opportunity to build up from this point,” Qayyum told Arab News.
“Our sole aim was to be recognized as a legitimate political party and refute the allegations of extremism.”

The MML spokesman said this was a beginning and his party was satisfied. “We believe we have an avenue to play our role in the stability and progress of Pakistan and we will continue to serve the people."

However, both the successful TLP and failed MMA are unsatisfied and say they will not accept the results. 

The TLP chief, Allama Khadim Hussain Rizvi, in his video message after his executive council meeting Lahore, has threatened “to lay siege to the assemblies if his mandate is not given back.” 

Fazlur Rehman, the MMA’s president, told the media after his alliance’s meeting in Islamabad that he would seek a consensus over a drive for outlawing the election.

Why are religious parties unsuccessful?

Analysts say the religious parties were never the top choice.

“Religious parties have never received many votes and have always been more a nuisance than a popular phenomenon,” Husain Haqqani, former ambassador and author of “Pakistan: Between Mosque and Military," told Arab News.

Haqqani says their votes were cast for PTI this time. “Traditionally the establishment favored them to espouse hardline Islamic nationalism over Kashmir and Afghanistan against India and the US. That function is now being performed by the PTI," he said.

Naufil Shahrukh, director of the Islamabad-based Institute of Policy Studies (IPS), says the ideals of the new generation of voters do not match the image of MMA, mainly because of the power politics of Fazlur Rehman.

“This phenomenon will increase in every upcoming election and apparently the share of religious political parties in Pakistan's federal and provincial assemblies will continue to be eroded," Shahrukh told Arab News.

Muhammad Ibrahim Qazi, a commentator and social activist, concurs with Shahrukh.

“According to recent studies, there are around 60 million millennials in Pakistan. The characteristics of these young men and women in descending order are being liberal, highly educated, narcissistic and self-seeking,” Qazi told Arab News, adding that historically the religious parties had a 21 percent vote bank that was cut down in size by 11 percent in 2002 when the MMA came to power in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan.

“Later the polls indicated that this was dropped to 6 percent due to frustration and due to the lack of transformation, keeping in view the contemporary political challenges.”

People want to vote for religious parties but would comfortably move to a liberal side because the masses don’t want to undergo any kind of religious and moral policing, Qazi said.


Imran Khan has allowed party to submit demands to Pakistan government in writing — aide

Updated 08 January 2025
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Imran Khan has allowed party to submit demands to Pakistan government in writing — aide

  • Second round of discussions between both sides ended inconclusively last week after Khan’s party demanded more time to consult ex-PM
  • PM’s special assistant on political affairs says negotiations to resume after National Assembly Speaker Ayaz Sadiq returns from overseas trip 

ISLAMABAD: Former prime minister Imran Khan has allowed his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party to submit its demands in writing to the government during the next round of negotiations between the two sides, Khan’s top aide and PTI Chairman Gohar Ali Khan said on Wednesday, as both sides attempt to break the political deadlock in the country. 
The second round of discussions between the two sides took place on Jan. 2 ended inconclusively after Khan’s party demanded more time to meet and consult the ex-PM before submitting their demands in writing.
Khan’s ouster in a parliamentary no-trust vote in 2022 has plunged Pakistan into a political crisis, particularly since he was jailed in August 2023 on corruption and other charges. His party has regularly held protests to demand his release, with many of the demonstrations turning violent.
“Today Khan has said that you can give our demands in writing [to the government],” Gohar Ali Khan told reporters after his meeting with the former prime minister at the central prison in Rawalpindi. “So we will give our demands at the negotiation table in writing.”
Khan’s party has previously stated two demands: the release of all political prisoners and the establishment of judicial commissions to investigate protests on May 9, 2023, and Nov. 26, 2024, which the government says involved Khan supporters, accusing them of attacking military installations and government buildings.
“We will present our two demands in writing because even though there is no need to do so, we don’t want it to [delay the talks] by using it as a reason,” he said.
At a press conference on Wednesday evening, Special Assistant to the Prime Minister on Political Affairs Rana Sanaullah said talks between both sides had been paused as National Assembly Speaker Ayaz Sadiq, who is heading the government’s delegation, has left the country on an “emergency” visit to a foreign country. 
“As soon as he returns, the second meeting that they want [with Imran Khan] will be held and after that we expect that they will present their demands seriously,” Sanaullah told reporters. 
The next date for talks between the PTI and the government has not been finalized. Last week, Senator Irfan Siddiqui, a member of the government’s negotiation committee, said the talks could encounter “serious hurdles” due to the PTI’s failure to submit its demands in writing at the next meeting.


Afghanistan hire Younis Khan as mentor for Champions Trophy in Pakistan

Updated 08 January 2025
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Afghanistan hire Younis Khan as mentor for Champions Trophy in Pakistan

  • Younis Khan, 47, played 118 Tests, 265 ODIs and 25 T20Is for Pakistan before retiring in 2017
  • Afghanistan is in Champions Trophy Group B with England, Australia and South Africa

ISLAMABAD: Afghanistan has hired former Pakistan captain Younis Khan as a mentor for its men’s cricket team at next month’s Champions Trophy in Pakistan.
The Afghanistan Cricket Board (ACB) said in a statement on Wednesday that the 47-year-old batting great will join the team in Pakistan ahead of the Champions Trophy and will stay with Afghanistan at the tournament.
Younis, who played 118 tests, 265 ODIs and 25 T20s for Pakistan, retired from international cricket in 2017 and briefly worked with the national team as batting coach in 2021 before quitting after differences with the Pakistan Cricket Board.
Afghanistan is in Group B with England, Australia and South Africa. It will play its first match against South Africa at Karachi on Feb. 21.
More than 160 UK politicians have urged England to refuse to play against Afghanistan. The politicians wrote asking the England and Wales Cricket Board to take a stand against the Taliban regime’s assault on women’s rights.
It will be a second stint for Younis with Afghanistan, having previously worked with the team at a training camp in Abu Dhabi in 2022.
It will be the third straight major ICC tournament where Afghanistan has utilized local expertise by appointing a mentor, after former India international Ajay Jadeja for the 2023 World Cup in India, and Dwayne Bravo as bowling consultant at the 2024 T20 World Cup in the West Indies and US
“Since the Champions Trophy is being held in Pakistan, it was required to assign a talented and experienced player as mentor from the hosting country,” ACB chief executive Naseeb Khan said.
Afghanistan finished sixth at the World Cup in India after beating England, Pakistan and Sri Lanka to seal its Champions Trophy place. At the T20 World Cup, Afghanistan advanced to the semifinals.
The Champions Trophy will begin Feb. 19 in Karachi.
India, which is in Group A with Pakistan, New Zealand and Bangladesh, will play all its games in Dubai.


Pakistani women require permission from male guardians to perform Hajj alone — religion ministry

Updated 08 January 2025
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Pakistani women require permission from male guardians to perform Hajj alone — religion ministry

  • Saudi Arabia allowed women to perform Umrah and Hajj on their own in October 2022
  • Number of women applicants for solo Hajj has nearly doubled from last year, says official

ISLAMABAD: Women intending to perform Hajj alone need permission from their male guardians such as fathers, husbands or in the absence of both, other close male relatives, officials of Pakistan’s religion ministry and the Council of Islamic Ideology (CII) said on Wednesday.
In October 2022, Saudi Arabia allowed women to perform the Islamic pilgrimages of Umrah and Hajj without “a mahram,” a male with whom Islam forbids a woman to marry due to her close relationship with them. Examples of a mahram for a woman include her father, husband, son and brother, among others.
The CII, a constitutional body responsible for advising the government on matters related to Islam, ruled in June 2023 that a woman will be allowed to perform Hajj without her male guardian subject to two conditions: that she has permission from her spouse or parents for the pilgrimage, and that she has a “group of reliable female pilgrims and there is no threat to her dignity.”
Pakistan’s religious affairs ministry spokesperson, Muhammad Umer Butt, said women wishing to perform Hajj without a male guardian were required to submit written permission from their father, husband, or other guardians along with their Hajj 2025 application.
“Last year we facilitated single women for Hajj, and they are allowed again this year with the number of applicants nearly doubling from 3,027 in 2024 to 6,028 this year,” Butt told Arab News.
He said that after the Saudi government’s decision to allow women to perform Hajj on their own, Pakistan’s Ministry of Religious Affairs sought guidance from the CII and implemented their recommendations.
“The ministry has ensured that these women will travel in women-only groups, prioritizing their safety and comfort,” Butt said.
Butt said the majority of female pilgrims who have applied for Hajj this year are accompanied by mahrams. A small number of women faced difficulties in the availability of mahrams and have opted to travel for the pilgrimage alone, he said.
CII spokesperson Rana Zahid explained the religious body’s 2023 decision, saying that women were permitted by Shariah to perform Hajj alone if they were unable to find male guardians.
“However, this permission is subject to certain conditions and the woman must obtain consent from her father, husband (if married), or guardian,” Zahid said. 
He said such women must also travel with a trustworthy group of women or “reliable companions,” ensuring there is no apparent risk or threat to her safety and dignity. 
Saudi Arabia has allotted Pakistan a total quota of 179,210 pilgrims for the upcoming Hajj pilgrimage, to be divided equally between the government and private schemes.


Pakistan sisters set father on fire after rape — police 

Updated 08 January 2025
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Pakistan sisters set father on fire after rape — police 

  • Sisters took petrol from motorcycle and set fire to father while he slept on Jan. 1, say police
  • Father had been raping eldest girl for a year, twice attempted to rape younger one, sisters allege

LAHORE: Two teenage sisters were arrested in Pakistan for killing their father by setting him on fire in revenge for rape, police said Wednesday.
The father was attacked in the Punjabi city of Gujranwala on January 1 and taken to hospital where he died on Tuesday.
“The girls said that they decided among themselves to find a ‘permanent solution’,” Rizwan Tariq, a senior police official in the city, told AFP.
They then took petrol from a motorcycle and set their father on fire as he slept, he added.
The pair, who are step-sisters, said their father had been raping the eldest girl for a year, and had twice attempted to rape the younger girl.
Their mothers — who are both married to the man — knew about the abuse but did not know of the revenge plan.
AFP has not named the man in order to protect the identities of the girls, one of whom is from a previous marriage.
One of the wives has also been arrested while the second is being questioned.
“We expect to present them before the court in a few days, as soon as we finish the investigation,” Tariq added.


Pakistan dispatches convoy of 40 aid trucks for violence-hit Kurram district

Updated 08 January 2025
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Pakistan dispatches convoy of 40 aid trucks for violence-hit Kurram district

  • Tribal and sectarian clashes have caused medicine, food and fuel shortages in Kurram district
  • Armed men attacked aid convoy en route to Kurram district on Saturday, injuring five persons

PESHAWAR: The government in Pakistan’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province on Wednesday dispatched a convoy of 40 vehicles carrying relief items for the violence-hit Kurram district, an official confirmed, days after an aid convoy en route to the area came under attack.
Five people, including a top administration official, were injured when armed men shot at an aid convoy en route to Kurram district near Bagan, a tense locality in the district, on Saturday. The convoy was stalled as the provincial government vowed stern action against the culprits and their facilitators.
Kurram, a northwestern district of around 600,000 people in the KP province, has been rocked by tribal and sectarian clashes since Nov. 21 when gunmen attacked a convoy of Shia passengers, killing 52. Sporadic clashes since then have killed at least 136 people before the provincial government brokered a ceasefire between the warring tribes last week.
“A convoy of 40 vehicles carrying relief items for Kurram district was sent safely today,” Muhammad Ali Saif, a spokesperson for the KP government, said in a statement. 
Saif said a convoy of 10 vehicles had reached Bagan while another comprising 30 vehicles will arrive at Parachinar, the district’s capital, and Upper Kurram “soon.”
“The convoy was sent after successful negotiations with local protesters till late last night,” the spokesperson said.
The violence in the district forced authorities to block a main road connecting Kurram’s main town of Parachinar with the provincial capital of Peshawar, causing medicine, food and fuel shortages in the area.
Saif said more aid convoys will be sent to the district after peace is established there.
The Saturday gun attack took place days after a grand jirga, or council of political and tribal elders formed by the KP provincial government, brokered a peace agreement between the warring Shia and Sunni tribes on Jan. 1, following weeks of efforts.
Under the peace agreement, both sides had agreed on the demolition of bunkers and the handover of heavy weapons to the authorities within two weeks.
It was also decided that land disputes in the volatile district will be settled on a priority basis with the cooperation of local tribes and the district administration.
The agreement said opening of banned outfits’ offices will be prohibited in the district, while social media accounts spreading hate will be discouraged via collective efforts backed by the government.