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Pakistan Elections 2013 Security News & Discussions

Fear stalks Pakistan's election candidates


In Pakistan a political candidate has been killed in a shooting in the Southern port city of Karachi, together with his young son.

It is the latest incident of election-related violence, which has claimed more than 70 lives in the past month.

The Pakistan Taliban have been targeting candidates from the three main secular parties, which formed the last coalition government.

Officials say it is the most violent election campaign the country has ever seen.


Video:- BBC News - Fear stalks Pakistan's election candidates
 
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Fear stalks Pakistan's election candidates


In Pakistan a political candidate has been killed in a shooting in the Southern port city of Karachi, together with his young son.

It is the latest incident of election-related violence, which has claimed more than 70 lives in the past month.

The Pakistan Taliban have been targeting candidates from the three main secular parties, which formed the last coalition government.

Officials say it is the most violent election campaign the country has ever seen.


Video:- BBC News - Fear stalks Pakistan's election candidates

true however, Ruppee hasn't fallen stock market hasn't fallen.

PEOPLE are optimistic more than ever AllahmduLillah that this time a change will come. NO MORE PPP is a blessing. our nation will boom without PPP.

be it anyone as long as NO PPP it is a blessing & happy thing.

so BC can report whatever it wants but the real fact is people are optimistic.
 
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Seven thousand army troops along with 55,000 FC, Levies and police personnel are being deployed in Balochistan to ensure peaceful elections in the province.

QUETTA: The quick response force in Balochistan has been provided with helicopters that would only be used in case of an untoward incident.This was stated by Director General ISPR Major General Asim Saleem Bajwa on Monday said that the quick response force would be on standby during the elections.

Briefing the media in Quetta about security measures for the upcoming polls, he said that 7,000 army troops and an additional 55,000 FC, Levies and police personnel were being deployed in Balochistan to ensure peaceful elections in the province.

He said that ballot papers were provided in all districts of Balochistan and that the army had been deployed to guard them. Bajwa said the army provided ballot papers to 53 constituencies through helicopters in Balochistan.

The DG ISPR stated that Chief of Army Staff General Ashfaq Pervez Kayani has presided over a high level security meeting to review security arrangements for the elections.

He said Commander Southern Command Lieutenant General Alam Khattak, Inspector General Frontier Corps, Major General Obaidullah Khan and officials of secret services attended the meeting.

“The army chief is here in Quetta to review the security plan for the polls,” the DG ISPR said.

He said army and civilian forces will conduct joint patrolling to ensure order during the elections. He said electoral candidates were being provided levies and policemen for their security.
 
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Pakistan's minorities have no faith in democracy

LAHORE: In majority Muslim Pakistan, religious minorities say democracy is killing them.

Intolerance has been on the rise for the past five years under Pakistan's democratically elected government because of the growing violence of Islamic radicals, who are then courted by political parties, say many in the country's communities of Shiite Muslims, Christians, Hindus and other minorities.

On Saturday, the country will elect a new parliament, marking the first time one elected government is replaced by another in the history of Pakistan, which over its 66-year existence has repeatedly seen military rule. But minorities are not celebrating. Some of the fiercest Islamic extremists are candidates in the vote, and minorities say even the mainstream political parties pander to radicals to get votes, often campaigning side-by-side with well-known militants.

More than a dozen representatives of Pakistan's minorities interviewed by The Associated Press expressed fears the vote will only hand more influence to extremists. Since the 2008 elections, under the outgoing government led by the left-leaning Pakistan People's Party, sectarian attacks have been relentless and minorities have found themselves increasingly targeted by radical Islamic militants. Minorities have little faith the new election will change that.

"We are always opposed to martial law (but) during all the military regimes, the law and order was better and there was good security for minorities," said Amar Lal, a lawyer and human rights activist for Pakistan's Hindu community.

About 96 percent of Pakistan's population of 180 million is Muslim. Most are Sunni, but according to the CIA Factbook about 10 to 15 percent are members of the Shiite sect. The remaining 4 percent are adherents to other religions such as Christians, Hindus and Ahmedis - a sect reviled by mainstream Muslims as heretics because they believe a prophet came after Muhammad, defying a basic tenet of Islam that Muhammad was the last prophet. Sunni radicals view Shiite Muslims as apostates.

The US Commission on International Religious Freedom in a report last month berated the Pakistani government for its poor record of protecting both its minorities and its majority Sunni Muslims and recommended that Pakistan be put on a list of worst offenders, which could jeopardize billions of dollars in US assistance.

"The government of Pakistan continues to engage in and tolerate systematic, ongoing and egregious violations of freedom of religion or belief," the report said. "Sectarian and religiously motivated violence is chronic, especially against Shiite Muslims, and the government has failed to protect members of religious minority communities, as well as the majority faith."

Lal said that in the past three years, 11,000 Hindus living in Pakistan's southwestern Baluchistan province have migrated to India because they were worried about security and frustrated by kidnappings and forced conversions of young Hindu girls to Islam. Pakistan's Hindu minority complains that scores of Hindu girls have been kidnapped, forced to marry their abductor and convert to Islam.

"In Pakistan's southern Sindh province, from every Hindu house, one member of the family has left either for Karachi or for a foreign land," said Lal, who was once a special adviser to Benazir Bhutto, the leader of the Pakistan People's Party until her assassination in December 2007.

"We have lost our hope from the democratic forces because they do everything for money" and nothing for minorities, he said.

Pakistan's Christian communities have complaints as well.

In March, a mob of young Muslims stormed and set fire to nearly 150 homes and shops in the Joseph Christian Colony, a Christian enclave on the outskirts of Lahore, the capital of Punjab, Pakistan's most populous province, where 60 percent of Pakistanis live and where militant Islamic groups have their headquarters. The mob gathered after one resident was accused of blasphemy, but local people say it was a tiff over money. Most residents fled for their lives, returning the next morning and eventually rebuilding their homes.

On April 30, some radicals attacked 25-year-old resident Babar Ilyas. His injured arm and leg wrapped in bandages, Ilyas told the AP that he was beaten by radicals who warned Christians to leave the area and drop charges against at least two people arrested in connection with the earlier attack.

"We do not have any hope in elections," said Salim Gabriel, a self-declared social worker for Christians and colony resident. "Dictatorship is better for minorities."

Gabriel accused political parties of aligning with radical Islamic groups to get votes, campaigning with well-known militants which he says emboldens radicals among Pakistan's Sunni majority to carry out attacks against minorities with impunity. Minority religious groups fear extremists will piggyback on the backs of mainstream political parties to a position of political power. They most often point to Nawaz Sharif, the head of the Pakistan Muslim League.

In an interview with the AP, Sharif's spokesman Siddiq-ul-Farooqi flatly rejected any links to extremist groups.

"We are a moderate party and have no relationship with extremists," Farooqi said.

Members of the party, however, have been seen on the campaign trail with members of extremist parties like the Ahle Sunat Wal Jamaat, a new name for the outlawed Sunni militant group Sipah-e-Sahabah Pakistan, or SSP. Minority leaders and election monitoring groups say Sharif's party is withdrawing candidates in certain electoral constituencies to give radical religious candidates an unchallenged run for election.

Farooqi denied any accommodation with extremist groups.

But Pakistani politics is rarely straightforward. Sharif's party has fielded several Shiite candidates, even as it rubbed shoulders with militant Islamists who publicly call Shiites apostates deserving of death.

Most of the deadly attacks targeting Shiites in Pakistan have been carried out by a group affiliated with the SSP. Yet the renamed SSP is fighting elections as part of a coalition of six radical religious parties. Maulana Ahmed Ludhianvi, the leader of the SSP and a candidate, said the coalition has 300 candidates running for election. His party placards often hurl abuses at Shiites, calling them kafirs, or non-believers.

The non-believer epitaph is also widely used in reference to Ahmedis, who consider themselves Muslims but have been explicitly declared non-Muslims in Pakistan's constitution. As well as violent attacks on its members, Ahmedi leaders told the AP they have been singled out with a separate electoral roll that identifies them as Ahmedis. The separate list also gives their addresses, making them easy targets. Security was tightened after a brutal attack in 2010 when militants simultaneously hit two Ahmedi mosques in Lahore killing more than 100 people and wounding scores more.

Ahmedis rarely vote in elections because to do so they have to declare they are non-Muslims, says Shahid Ataullah, a spokesman for the Ahmedi community in Lahore.

So virulent is the abhorrence of Ahmedis by Pakistan's religious right-wing parties that many candidates in Saturday's elections have found it necessary to openly declare their view that Ahmedis are non-Muslims.

The country's controversial blasphemy laws are often used to jail Ahmedis for crimes as simple as saying Assalam-o-Allaikum, a traditional greeting among Muslims and often used by non-Muslims living in predominately Muslim countries. It means "May the peace of God be upon you."

Pakistan's minorities have no faith in democracy - The Times of India
 
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http://www.defence.pk/forums/pakist...ack-jui-f-election-candidate.html#post4254188

Violent Separatists Seek to Derail Pakistan Vote

The graffiti on walls around this Pakistani provincial capital hold a dire warning ahead of this weekend's national elections, "Voting means death." It's a very real threat: Over recent weeks at least six people have been killed and around 40 wounded in bombings and grenade attacks targeting candidates.

Ethnic Baluch separatists who have waged a bloody insurgency trying to win independence for the vast, sparsely populated province of Baluchistan are seeking to derail the vote with a campaign of violence. In large part, their targets have been fellow Baluch, seen by the separatists as traitors for agreeing to participate in the vote.

"Our houses are not safe. Our workers are not safe. Our leaders are directly targeted every day," said Naimatullah Gichki, a senior member of a Baluch party, the National Party. "We are fighting a war, not an election."

Saturday's election has thrown into sharp relief a question that has divided the country's Baluch ethnic minority: Can the community win their rights at the ballot box or is the only solution a violent campaign to break away from Pakistan?

The Baluch have long been alienated by what they see as exploitation by the central government. Wedged between the borders with Afghanistan and Iran, Baluchistan is rich in oil, natural gas and valuable minerals. But it is Pakistan's poorest province and remains extremely underdeveloped, with residents complaining that resource riches have mainly gone to fill the federal government's coffers. The province is Pakistan's largest, making up around 40 percent of its area, but also its least populated, with only 9 million people, about half the population of the city of Karachi. Just over half the province's population is Baluch.

The local government is seen as notoriously corrupt, dysfunctional and not responsive to Baluch grievances. Adding to the misery, paramilitary soldiers and intelligence agents have waged a repressive campaign against separatists in which they are accused of snatching scores of people off the street and either killing them or holding them in secret detention. That has fueled distrust of authorities and support for the separatists, especially among Baluchistan's young middle class.

The area has also been plagued by horrific attacks by Islamic militants on minority Shiites. Afghan Taliban fighters have used the territory's empty, arid landscape as a refuge, and the group's elusive leader Mullah Omar is believed to be hiding here. The province, located on the Arabian Sea, is also vital to coalition forces fighting in landlocked Afghanistan, providing one of two overland routes used to ship NATO supplies to troops there.

Some see the voting for national and provincial assemblies as a possible turning point.

Baluch nationalist parties that boycotted elections five years ago and have been out of power in the province for over a decade have decided to participate in the vote. They are pressing Baluch demands for greater autonomy and a larger share of the province's resources — but they advocate remaining part of the state. The hope is that their victory could lessen support for the violent insurgency.

But the question of whether participation is the solution has even divided families.

http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/violent-separatists-seek-derail-pakistan-vote-19119235#.UYjYV1LOanA
 
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ECP announces increase in election security

The DG of the ISPR announced the deployment of 10,000 military personnel in Karachi for election duties.

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SINDH: The Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) decided on Tuesday to increase security at polling stations for the coming May 11 election, DawnNews reported.According to the new security plan, ten personnel instead of nine would be appointed for the most sensitive polling stations in the country whereas nine security persons instead of eight would be deployed for the polling stations declared as sensitive.Moreover, regular polling stations would also be provided with an additional person, taking the total number from four to five.

A spokesman for the ECP said no army person would be deployed at any of the country’s polling station, but would be available at all times as a quick response force.The ECP decided to bring all sensitive polling stations within a certain vicinity under a single building.In related news, the Director General of the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) Major General Asim Saleem Bajwa briefed media persons about the security situation during upcoming elections across Sindh and also apprised them of the deployment of 10,000 military personnel in Karachi for election duties.He added that troops would also be mobilised by helicopters for election related responsibilities.

ECP announces increase in election security

Kayani reviews Balochistan election security

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QUETTA, May 6: Over 60,000 security personnel, including 7,000 army troops, have been deployed in sensitive areas of Balochistan to provide security in and around polling stations on the election day.

Director General of Inter-Services Public Relations Maj Gen Asim Bajwa said at a press briefing here on Monday night that a high-level meeting presided over by Army chief Gen Ashfaq Parvez Kayani in Quetta Cant had reviewed a security plan for maintaining law and order and protecting candidates, voters and polling staff across Balochistan on May 11.

The meeting was attended by Commandant Southern Command Lt Gen Mohammad Aalam Khatak, Chief Secretary of Balochistan Babar Yaqoob Fateh Mohammad, Home Secretary Akbar Hussain Durrani, Inspector General of Frontier Corps Maj Gen Obaidullah Khattak, provincial police chief Mushtaq Sukhira, heads of military and civilian intelligence agencies and other senior officials.

The army chief stressed the need for implementing the security plan in letter and spirit to protect candidates, voters and polling staff, especially in sensitive areas of the province. He asked the heads of law-enforcement agencies to monitor implementation of the plan and deploy extra forces in sensitive areas.

The army chief directed intelligence agencies to share with the provincial authorities information, if any, about anti-peace elements so that their nefarious designs could be foiled. Gen Bajwa said that on the instructions of the army chief, a joint team of military and civilian law-enforcement agencies, including the army, Frontier Corps, police, Balochistan Constabulary and Levies Force, had started patrolling in sensitive districts of the province.

He said army helicopters would also be used to monitor implementation of the security plan in all constituencies of Balochistan. He said Gen Kayani had taken serious notice of the attacks on election rallies and offices of political parties and directed the law-enforcement agencies to beef up security.

APP adds: Home Secretary Akbar Hussain said the Balochistan government had completed all arrangements to maintain law and order in the province during the elections.

Talking to VOA, he said the army and FC personnel were being deployed in the province to ensure free and fair elections, adding that they would take up their responsibilities during this week.

He said Makran and Kalat had been declared highly sensitive districts and Quetta, Bolan, Jafarabad, Nasirabad and some areas of Dera Bugti sensitive.

The home secretary said that although there was no threat of attacks from a specific organisation or group, a plan had been chalked out to combat those who wanted to sabotage the elections.

He said the Pakistan-Afghan border in Balochistan would be closed on the polling day as per directives of the Foreign Office and FC personnel would be deployed on vacant checkposts along the border.

http://beta.dawn.com/news/812329/kayani-reviews-balochistan-election-security
 
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Rangers have recovered fake ballot papers from a car at Khairpur bypass during checking. 2 people have been arrested.

PS 76 and NA 233 ballot papers numbering around 200.
 
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