Saturday, 13 April 2013

Threat to voters in KP too be ignored

PESHAWAR, Pakistan News Reported Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s volatile security environment poses a threatening challenge to political parties contesting the upcoming general elections.With only about a month left before the May 11 elections, candidates and party workers have got a massive risky job at hands to contact voters and seek their support before and on the polling day.The grassroots party workers have always been crucial to their respective party’s success in the previous elections. This time round, the workers’ significance has grown manifold.They can play an important role in spearheading their respective party’s pre-poll campaign, avoiding risks to the party leaders and supporters.Though several of the political parties have fielded wealthy candidates in many Khyber Pakhtunkhwa districts in their apparent strategy to win the elections, this has not diminished the diehard party workers’ significance in making things happen even for their wealthy poll contenders.They would hold the key to reach out to voters without compromising security and protection of their respective party’s electorates.

Undoubtedly, no political party can afford to lose voters by rendering them to situations where the electorates select to stay away from the polling stations. Threats from miscreants are too real and have the potential to scare away voters.Given the current insecurity in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, political parties are apparently jittery to hold big public meetings. Such meetings have been an important canvassing technique in the political parties’ pre-poll mass contact strategy.The well-attended party meetings are considered important. They serve the party leaders to explain their policies and programs to people gathered at one place. Besides, such events bolster political parties’ public image and galvanize their diehard workers, boosting their confidence and bringing them swing voters.However, this time round, political parties are apparently hesitant to go for this option in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

They have already been foretold to exercise caution in conducting their election campaigns as the provincial police cannot ensure 100 per cent security during their public meetings.The provincial police’s position is understandable. The monster of militancy has grown so big and troubling that a civilian law enforcement agency, like the KP police that is struggling with efficiency and training issues, cannot provide answers to the people’s security woes.However, the essence of democracy is in holding a free and fair election. This fundamental requirement cannot be ensured without providing a level playing field to all the political parties in the run up to the elections day.Candidates and supporters of Awami National Party and Pakistan People’s Party are exposed to some real threats in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and elsewhere at the hands of militants as was expected. The two parties are disadvantageously positioned as they do not have a carefree freedom to conduct canvassing at a time when, among all the political forces in the country, they need it the most based on their unimpressive stint in power for five years.

The threats to the current electoral process, particularly, the liberal political forces have not come as a surprise. The risks were imminent and anticipated since long.What is ironic is the fact that political parties, particularly the most threatened ones, did not do much and evolve strategies in advance for carrying out electioneering without yielding to miscreants’ threats under the existing difficult situation.Extraordinary situations require extraordinary responses. ANP and PPP have got quite a few options to carry out their election campaigns without exposing their supporters to the militants’ attacks. 

There is a need to prefer innovation over traditional means of spreading party programs.In place of holding general public meetings in major urban centers, political parties can utilise electronic and social media to their maximum advantage. In this respect, political talk shows aired in dozens by television news channels 24/7 provide a free of cost opportunity to the parties to put their message across through airwaves to their electorates.Some political parties have already made best use of such talk shows, satisfying their appetite for making speeches at public meetings.Political parties with sufficient funds at their disposal can also buy airtime on major television network to take their message to the masses instead of holding public meetings. Similarly, they can make campaign ads to spread their message without exposing their electorates to the dangers posed by militants’ brutal and cruel attacks.

They can create acceptance for their vibrant political ideas by making use of the social media as well. Some parties have already been using Facebook, Twitter, Google Plus, Tumblr, emails and other similar options to conduct their pre-poll campaigns.They can evolve separate strategies to access their electorates in the urban and rural areas, without compromising their public appeal in the current difficult times in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. The threat is real, but it is not too acute to give up.

An Old Warrior Still Leads the Pack

SIALKOT: In a sprawling home opposite the golden arches of McDonald’s, the man with the golden touch in this northern Punjab city is quietly and confidently preparing for electoral battle yet again.Khwaja Asif, the silver-haired PML-N impresario with the signature country drawl, has never lost an election in this wealthy, modern export hub with a politics rooted in the old ways of biradirism.In 2002, Asif, along with a running mate on a provincial assembly ticket, was the only PML-N candidate in the entire Gujranwala division to win a seat.
Pakistan News Reported:  In 2008, his fourth National Assembly victory on the trot, Asif won by a margin of 40,000 votes, more than twice the number secured by the PPP runner-up.This time round, Asif has also thrown his hat into the provincial assembly ring – sparking rumours that he may be eying the chief minister’s slot after the election. For all his success, though, Asif continues to deflect credit towards his boss, PML-N supremo Nawaz Sharif.“Sialkot is PML-N territory. There’s high literacy, low unemployment and the people are low to middle middle-class. They identify with Mian Sahib’s middle-class origins,” Asif explained.He continued: “Then there’s Mian Sahib’s pro-business policies. He finished the octroi tax, fixed the tax rates and as a result there’s massive, massive amounts of white money here. The business community has a relationship with him.”All is far from well in Sialkot today, however. Rolling blackouts have left the city without electricity for more hours a day than with. Lengthy queues of vehicles snake around the many CNG filling stations here, when there is any gas left to pump, that is.Chronic shutdowns at the some 6,000 small and medium enterprises that produce $1.5bn of exports a year has triggered mass layoffs and left owners complaining about the spiralling cost of business.And there is a growing vein of resentment against Asif’s aloof and autocratic style of politics. “People like N-League, but not necessarily Khwaja Asif,” said NaeemIqbal, a local journalist. “It won’t be so easy for N-League and Khwaja to win this time.”

Wednesday, 3 April 2013

SC hears Adiala jail missing prisoners case

ISLAMABAD: Chief Justice of Pakistan Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry, while hearing the Adiala jail missing prisoners’ case, questioned that why the prisoners held in detention center were not presented before the magistrate, Pakistan News reported Wednesday.

A three-member bench of the Supreme Court (SC) headed by Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry resumed the hearing of the case regarding missing prisoners from Adiala Jail.

During today’s hearing, the CJ questioned that why the prisoners who were kept in dentention center were not presented before the magistrate and for how long this matter will continue.

On this, lawyer of the secret agencies Raja Irshad told that the notification to keep those prisoners in custody has been withdrawn.

The hearing of the case is still underway in the SC.

In the previous hearing, Raja Muhammad Irshad had informed the court that the interment authority had withdrawn its order against the Adiala Jail prisoners and they had een handed over to the Political administration in the tribal area wherein they would be tried under the FCR laws. Tariq Asad, counsel for the petitioners, contended that the detainees were detained illegally either by the interment authority and political administration.

The court had directed counsel for the intelligence agencies to place on record, the report and also directed him to provide copy of the interment order to counsel for the petitioners as well on the next date of hearing.