Pakistan Plans To Postpone The November Parliamentary Elections By Holding Them At The End Of January.
The next parliamentary elections in Pakistan, which were originally scheduled to take place in November, will now take place in the final week of January, according to the election oversight body's announcement on Thursday.
The Election Commission of Pakistan's declaration, however, has put an end to any lingering doubts regarding the outcome of the vote. Previously, certain political parties had worried that the election might be postponed indefinitely.
Since April 2022, when former Prime Minister Imran Khan was ousted from office by a parliamentary vote of no confidence, Pakistan has been experiencing escalating political unrest.
Khan was taken into custody at the beginning of August on suspicion of corruption and given a three-year prison sentence by a judge.
To take into account the most recent census, Pakistan's electoral map is being updated. The electoral commission announced in a brief statement that a final list of constituencies would be released on November 30.
The precise date of the election will be revealed later by the Election Commission.
On former Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif's recommendation, Pakistan's President Arif Alvi also dissolved parliament in August. This action usually serves as the catalyst for the process of having elections within 90 days. The poll, which was originally scheduled for October or November, was postponed after the electoral commission claimed it required additional time to redraft the constituencies to take into account the most recent census.
When the tenure of the parliament ended last month, Sharif resigned.
Anwaar-ul-Haq Kakar, the caretaker premier, is currently in charge of the government's day-to-day operations.
Khan's Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf opposition party, according to Kakar, was not outlawed and could run candidates in the election.
The well-liked 70-year-old former cricketer Khan has been detained at the Attock prison in eastern Punjab province since August after being found guilty of hiding riches he acquired through selling state gifts.
If Khan's conviction is not overturned, he will be unable to run for office.
Anyone having a criminal record is ineligible to lead a political party, run for office, or hold public office in Pakistan.
The political rivalries between Khan and Asif Zardari's and Nawaz Sharif's parties would likely be fierce in the upcoming elections. After Khan was ousted in 2022, Sharif took over as prime minister but was unable to revive Pakistan's faltering economy, saving it from certain default.
Anti-inflation rallies have been spurred by one of the worst economic crises Pakistan has ever experienced.
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