The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) on Sunday demanded an “immediate end” to the prevailing “uncertainty surrounding the general elections.”
The HRCP has called upon the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) to promptly announce the schedule for the upcoming polls.
“The governing Council of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP), on concluding a meeting earlier today, has expressed immense concern over the uncertainty surrounding the general elections,” said the HRCP in a news statement.
It insisted that the ECP announce an election schedule promptly such that polls were held as close as possible to the stipulated 90-day period.
“The delimitation of constituencies must also be completed quickly and efficiently and under no circumstances used as an excuse to delay the elections any further,” the body stressed.
“Moreover, HRCP is concerned by the scope for manipulating the electoral process by institutions such as NADRA and urges the ECP to guard against this possibility,” it noted.
The HRCP is greatly alarmed by the increasingly polarised environment, in which religious and sectarian divisions are being exacerbated reportedly to carve out artificial political space for far right parties such as the TLP.
“The divisive and violent tactics used by such parties to build their political identities—particularly at the expense of religious minorities and sects—is eating into organic political and civic spaces,” the body said, adding the continuing terrorist violence in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa had also made political parties more apprehensive about campaigning in the province—“a pattern we have witnessed before and must not go through again.”
“Apart from ensuring that free, fair and credible elections take place, the test of the current caretaker government is to see not only whether it will protect and respect people’s right to protest peacefully, but also whether it will respond to the issues that ordinary citizens are mobilising around,” the HRCP maintained.