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International Business Times
International Business Times
World
Saad SAYEED with Cyril BELAUD in Islamabad

Last Day Of Campaigning In Pakistan's Lackluster Election

Supporters of the Pakistan Peoples Party at a campaign rally in Karachi (Credit: AFP)

Pakistan's politicians on Tuesday hit the campaign trail for the last time, ahead of a general election that observers say has left the nation of 240 million at its most discouraged in years.

With former prime minister Imran Khan in jail and his party barred from contesting as a bloc, the field is open for the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) to win the most seats and give a fourth term as premier to its founder, Nawaz Sharif.

Candidates loyal to Khan's Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party could still prove a decisive factor -- as well as the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) of Bilawal Bhutto Zardari -- but a generally lackluster campaign season as well as voter apathy suggest Thursday will see a low turnout.

"The political atmosphere ahead of Pakistan's first general election since 2018 is equally as glum as the economic one," said the polling agency Gallup ahead of Thursday's vote.

"Seven in 10 Pakistanis lack confidence in the honesty of their elections. While this ties previous highs, it nevertheless represents a significant regression in recent years."

Candidates must end all canvassing on Tuesday night, before polls open Thursday for more than 120 million registered voters to take part in an election rights activists have called deeply flawed.

Looming large over the vote -- despite being barred from taking part -- is former international cricketer Khan, who was handed three lengthy prison sentences last week for treason, graft and a marriage that did not meet Islamic law requirements.

He faced a fresh trial starting Tuesday, this time in a secretive military court, over riots led by his supporters last year.

The election comes against the backdrop of an economy in dire straits and a significant rise in militancy.

The Pakistan Institute for Conflict and Security Studies, an Islamabad-based think tank, said there had been a "staggering" rise in militant attacks in the past year with an average 54 per month -- the most since 2015, when the army launched a massive crackdown on militant groups.

On Monday, at least 10 officers were killed when militants attacked a police station near the Afghan border in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.

Inflation is galloping at nearly 30 percent, the rupee has been in free fall for three years, and a balance of payments deficit has frozen imports, severely hampering industrial growth.

"Pakistanis are more discouraged than they have been in decades about a multitude of economic, political and security challenges that are threatening their country's stability," Gallup said its poll findings revealed.

"Last year, just one in four approved of Pakistan's leadership."

Frontrunner Sharif, jailed before the 2018 election but freed to seek medical treatment in Britain, returned to Pakistan last year with the blessing of the military-led establishment, and has since seen a string of convictions overturned, allowing him to run again.

He was due later Tuesday to hold his final rally near Lahore, the capital of Punjab province -- the country's most populous and home to more than half the national electorate.

In a bid to sidestep a nationwide crackdown, Khan's PTI has redefined election campaigning in Pakistan with social media rallies and the use of AI technology.

Stripped of its talisman cricket bat logo, the party has launched a mobile phone app that tells voters what logos are associated with its candidates, who are now effectively standing as independents.

Despite party information secretary Raoof Hassan calling it a "non-election", supporters have been urged to vote.

"The most powerful and meaningful weapon we have is our vote," Khan said in a message posted on his X account at the weekend.

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