|
That
there were irregularities in the elections in Karachi is no longer
in doubt. On February 22, two clips were posted on popular video-sharing
website YouTube.com showing a woman, posing as an MQM supporter,
enter a polling station in NA-250 with a hidden camera. She was
given eight stamped ballot papers and voted for the MQM in all of
them. Damning footage aired by Geo News offered further proof of
widespread rigging. Three separate segments, filmed at polling stations
in Karachi, show men tearing up ballot papers and preparing new
ones, capturing a polling station and frantically marking dozens
of new ballot papers, and forcing voters at a female polling booth
to mark ballots at gunpoint, respectively. Although none of the
videos aired on Geo identify which party the men belonged to, they
clearly give lie to government claims that the elections were free
of manipulation.
Matters
took a disturbing twist just a few hours after the NA-250 rigging
video was posted, as the Pakistan Telecommunications Authority (PTA)
issued a notification to all internet service providers in the country,
instructing them to block access to YouTube immediately. The reason
given for the blocking was that YouTube had offensive videos of
an anti-Islamic nature. Interestingly, the video cited on the PTA
notification as being blasphemous, which was a trailer for a documentary
by anti-Muslim Dutch politician Geert Wilders, had been posted on
January 28, meaning it took the PTA nearly a month to take notice
of this video. Also, that particular trailer happens to still be
available for viewing at dozens of unblocked sites.
Suspicions
that all was not kosher in Karachi were initially raised soon after
polls closed. Apart from NA-250, two other MQM wins - NA-249 and
NA-257 - have come under the closest scrutiny, although doubts have
been raised about the MQM's margin of victories in all of Karachi's
National Assembly seats.
At
around 10 p.m. on election night, Geo News reported that MQM Deputy
Convenor Dr Farooq Sattar was trailing PPP candidate Habib Memon
by nearly 16,000 votes in the battle for NA-249. It seemed that
the influential MQM leader was going to suffer a humiliating defeat
in his own backyard. Through the night, the private news channels
kept providing regular updates to all the National Assembly races.
The only exception was NA-249. From 10 p.m. to 4 a.m. there was
no further news on the race, until a sudden announcement was made
that Sattar had emerged victorious by 11,500 votes. It didn't take
long for the PPP to start crying foul.
The
PPP anti-rigging cell issued a report the day after the elections,
accusing the MQM of manipulating the results. The main thrust of
the charges was that Farooq Sattar, knowing he was on the verge
of defeat, made multiple phone calls to the nazim of Saddar Town,
which resulted in ballot boxes being sent to the office of the nazim
rather than the office of the Returning Officer. Habib Memon also
claims that he was ahead by 45,000 votes by 4 a.m. before a call
from the governor to the Returning Officer pressurised him to ensure
an MQM victory.
Memon
says that he has filed a complaint with the Election Commission
of Pakistan, asking for the result to be nullified. He says, "I
have submitted ballot papers that were already stamped with the
MQM symbol along with a video tape that shows rigging." The
MQM election cell, although unwilling to discuss Memon's and all
other rigging charges, alleges that two armed PPP activists were
arrested at a polling station while its polling agents were also
beaten up in the constituency. The election cell also claims that
the PPP was involved in rigging in NA-253 and that its activists
beat up an MQM polling agent.
A
similar story is told about polling in NA-257 by Belgian politician
Erik de Bruyn, who had been invited by the PPP to monitor the elections.
Bruyn chose to spend election day monitoring about 20 polling stations
that had been declared sensitive in NA-257 and was shocked by what
he saw. He says that only a few of the polling stations he visited
had PPP scrutineers. He attributes their absence to the fact that
15 PPP scrutineers were murdered on February 18. He, as well as
the PPP anti-rigging cell, also claim that other scrutineers were
tortured and abducted. The dangers to PPP polling agents were illustrated
when three of them were killed by unknown assailants on February
22.
Bruyn,
who describes some of the polling stations he visited "decorated
as headquarters of the MQM," says in a report he issued on
his monitoring activities, "In the evening I went to the central
counting office of the NA-257 district. What I saw and photographed
there defies everything imaginable. Stacks of bags full of election
forms were broken open. Forms were being filled in or changed in
the corridors of the court hall. Other original forms were thrown
away."
What
makes this seat, and most others in Karachi, so intriguing is that
they bucked the trend of a low turnout in the rest of the country.
NA-249 saw a turnout of over 55%, an increase of more than 20 percentage
points from 2002, while NA-250 and NA-257 saw an 11 and 7% increase,
respectively. This was despite the fact that most observers expected
a significant drop in turnout, given the fact that the Jamaat-e-Islami,
the city's second largest party in terms of vote count in 2002,
was sitting out the elections this time around. In such a situation
it is hard to avoid the conclusion that the turnout figures in Karachi
were artificially inflated.
|