Government Rigging Plans Confirmed

Pakistan: Attorney General Aware of ‘Massive’ Election-Rigging Plans
15 Feb 2008 05:41:33 GMT
Source: Human Rights Watch
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(New York, February 15, 2008)
In an audio recording obtained by Human Rights Watch, Pakistan’s Attorney General Malik Qayyum stated that upcoming parliamentary elections will be “massively rigged,”](http://hrw.org/audio/2008/urdu/pakistan0208.htm) Human Rights Watch said today. In the recording, Qayyum appears to be advising an unidentified person on what political party the person should approach to become a candidate in the upcoming parliamentary election, now scheduled for February 18, 2008.
Human Rights Watch said that the recording was made during a phone interview with a member of the media on November 21, 2007. Qayyum, while still on the phone interview, took a call on another telephone and his side of that conversation was recorded. The recording was made the day after Pakistan’s Election Commission announced the schedule for polls. The election was originally planned for January 8 but was postponed after the assassination of former prime minister Benazir Bhutto. Another former prime minister, Nawaz Sharif, returned to Pakistan on November 25. An English translation of the recording, which is in Urdu and Punjabi, follows:
“Leave Nawaz Sharif (PAUSE)… I think Nawaz Sharif will not take part in the election (PAUSE)… If he does take part, he will be in trouble. If Benazir takes part she too will be in trouble (PAUSE)… They will massively rig to get their own people to win. If you can get a ticket from these guys, take it (PAUSE)… If Nawaz Sharif does not return himself, then Nawaz Sharif has some advantage. If he comes himself, even if after the elections rather than before (PAUSE)?. Yes?.”
Repeated attempts by Human Rights Watch to contact Qayyum by phone were unsuccessful.
Fears of rigging have been a major issue in the current election campaign. Human Rights Watch said that since the official election period commenced in November 2007, there have been numerous allegations of irregularities, including arrests and harassment of opposition candidates and party members. There are also allegations that state resources, administration and state machinery are being used to the advantage of candidates backed by President Pervez Musharraf. Human Rights Watch expressed concern that the Election Commission, which is monitoring the polls, was not acting impartially.
Background
Malik Qayyum is a former judge who resigned from the bench in 2001 amid charges of misconduct. On April 15, 1999, a two-judge panel of the Lahore High Court headed by Qayyum convicted Benazir Bhutto and her husband Asif Ali Zardari in a corruption case. They were sentenced to five years in prison, fined US$8.6 million dollars each, disqualified as members of parliament for five years, and forced to forfeit their property. The impending verdict led Bhutto to go into exile in March 1999.
In February 2001, the Sunday Times, a British newspaper, published a report based on transcripts of 32 audio tapes, which revealed that Qayyum convicted Bhutto and Zardari for political reasons. The transcripts of the recordings reproduced by the newspaper showed that Qayyum asked then-Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif’s anti-corruption chief, Saifur Rehman, for advice on the sentence: “Now you tell me how much punishment do you want me to give her?”
In April 2001, on the basis of this evidence, a seven-member bench of Pakistan’s Supreme Court upheld an appeal by the couple, overturning the conviction. In its ruling, the Supreme Court contended that Qayyum had been politically motivated in handing down the sentence. Faced with a trial for professional misconduct before Pakistan’s Supreme Judicial Council, the constitutional body authorized to impeach senior judges, Qayyum opted to resign his post in June 2001.
A close associate of Musharraf, Qayyum was appointed as the lead counsel on behalf of Pakistan’s federal government in the presidential reference against Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry, instituted after Chaudhry was first illegally deposed by Musharraf on March 9, 2007. A full bench of Pakistan’s Supreme Court reinstated Chief Justice Chaudhry on July 20, 2007.
Qayyum was appointed attorney general of Pakistan by Musharraf in August 2007.
Clarifying the Complex | Homepage | Thomson Reuters

Make your own conclusion about what happens after the election, but you can even listen to the audio tape of Qayyum confirming the rigging plans in his own voice.

Re: Government Rigging Plants Confirmed

Thats a shame. A corrupt judge who as chair of the bench of Lahore High Court was asking Saif ur Rehman (NAB) how much punishment he wants for Benazir and Zardari back in 99. Again he was caught on phone and was dismissed.

Now I can say, if PML Q won, then its 200% rigging and nothing else. I have no doubt in my mind.

Re: Government Rigging Plants Confirmed

well good thing they already know about the plans.

why not spoil the plans if they know in so much detail about it? :)

Re: Government Rigging Plants Confirmed

They won't. Because the political parties know the elections will not be rigged. Why else would they still take part in the democratic process that is continuing to take place in Pakistan.

Re: Government Rigging Plants Confirmed

Aalsi
Follow the links and you can here Malik Qayum in his OWN VOICE saying the election will be massively rigged.
What else does anyone need to know?
So burn the govt. and the army as far as I care. Without violence there will be no change in Pakistan.
Thers no more need for elections.

Re: Government Rigging Plants Confirmed

Please tell that to all the parties that are taking part in this democratic process next week. I am sure they will listen to you. :)

Re: Government Rigging Plants Confirmed

The election is in place to prove to the world that Mushy is a tin pot despot who will do anything to hold on to power. When he rigs the elections (despite everything thats at stake) the world will know what kind of man he really is... than things can be set in motion to unseat and humiliate him to teach these beghairat generals and ex-generals a lesson in humility

Re: Government Rigging Plants Confirmed

That shows how much you know about Pakistan & its politics. There hasn't been free and fair election since 1970 and here you're saying that elections will not be rigged.

Re: Government Rigging Plants Confirmed

Good luck. :)

Re: Government Rigging Plants Confirmed

Wow. 1970 elections were fair, yet ZAB would not accept the results. Amazing.

Just goes to prove, in Pakistan, the losing party always cries.

Re: Government Rigging Plants Confirmed

Why the Pakistan elections will be rigged

Sushant Sareen

February 15, 2008

After 1970, Pakistan has never ever witnessed a free and fair election. There is no reason to believe that the February 18 elections will be any different. The stakes for Pervez Musharraf [Images], his cronies (the Pakistan Muslim League and allied parties), his patrons (the Americans) and perhaps also for his erstwhile core constituency (the Pakistan army) are so high that the luxury of a clean election cannot be permitted.

Despite the fact that the regime has gone to great lengths to cover its tracks and ensure that no nosey-parker ever stumbles on any evidence of rigging, Musharraf’s hand-picked attorney general, the notorious Malik Qayyum, who should ideally be in jail for all the crimes he has committed first as a judge and later as the first law officer of Pakistan, let the cat out of the bag when he was inadvertently caught on tape telling an unknown person that the polls will be massively rigged in favour of Musharraf’s supporters.

Chances are that at the end of the day, no solid evidence of rigging will emerge. And yet, the results will prove whether or not Musharraf lived up to his solemn assurances that the polls will be free and fair.

As things stand, if the election is clean then the PPP will almost certainly emerge not just as the largest party but also close to a simple majority. The PML (Nawaz) should be the second largest party and between them the PPP and PML-N should have close to two-thirds of the seats in the national assembly.

Back of the envelope calculations suggest that the PPP should get between 110-120 seats, PML-N around 50-60 seats, PML (the Pervez Musharraf League) will have 30-40 seats, the MMA 20-25 seats, MQM 20-25 seats, ANP 15-20 seats and the rest will be shared by independents and smaller parties.

Since such a result will be an unmitigated disaster for Musharraf and his underlings, the final outcome will have to be tweaked to throw up a more favourable setting. The big question is how much to tweak because an overkill could easily make the whole exercise look like a farce.

Ideally Musharraf will want a result in which his supporters hold the balance of power in the next national assembly. This means that if he can rob the opposition of a few seats each and raise the number of his supporters to around 110-120 then he will be able to control the both the formation and the functioning of the next government.

What is more, the result will be of a sort that rejecting it will not be an option and accepting it will amount to playing into Musharraf’s hands. Most importantly, Musharraf’s patrons will accept the verdict.

What is preventing Musharraf from rigging the elections blatantly is the fear is that if the results are rejected there could widespread street disturbances that will almost certainly sound the death knell of his regime.

At a time when the North West Frontier Province and Balochistan are in the throes of armed insurgency, the last thing that Pakistan needs is chaos and anarchy on the streets of Punjab and Sindh. In a sense, these elections are more about preventing the situation in Punjab and Sindh from spiralling out of control than about a transition to genuine democracy.

But Musharraf and his lackeys are prone to taking the chance that these fears are more imagined than real and that by indulging in some brinkmanship they can easily get a verdict of their choice.

Frankly, Musharraf knows that he has no option but to rig the polls. If an opposition government comes into power, his game is up. Even if they don’t have a two-thirds majority needed to impeach him, a mere vote of no-confidence will be enough to make his position completely untenable.

On the other hand a highly split verdict lets him stay in the power game for some more time. In the past whenever Musharraf has been confronted with a dire situation in which his survival is at stake, he has always taken his chances and so far managed to stay on in power.

The blatant disregard of the Supreme Court decision allowing Nawaz Sharif to return to Pakistan, and the imposition of martial law to remove the judges and muzzle the media, are some examples of how far he can go to retain power. He is now once again facing a similar situation and the odds are that he will not be averse to trying a little more brinkmanship.

In Musharraf’s calculations, there is a reasonable chance that the sort of disturbances that analysts are predicting will not happen. Sure, there will be the odd demonstration and protest, but this can be quelled easily, especially since the judiciary is packed with his men, the administration is in his pocket and the election commission operates on his instructions.

And there are very good reasons for Musharraf to think this way.

Despite knowing that the elections will be rigged, the main opposition political parties have jumped into the fray because of two reasons: one, they could not afford to give a walk-over to the Musharraf camp-followers; and second and more important, they were not sure if by boycotting the polls they will be able to create the conditions for launching a mass movement against the regime. The opposition game-plan was to use the election campaign to mobilise their supporters and build a momentum that could then be used to launch a mass-movement in case the elections were stolen. But Benazir Bhutto’s [Images] assassination has made this game-plan somewhat ineffective. While on the one hand, Benazir’s assassination has created a wave of revulsion against the Musharraf regime and in favour of the opposition, on the other hand political campaigns of political parties came to a grinding halt, thereby robbed the opposition parties of the chance to mobilise their supporters and workers.

The spate of suicide bombings ended whatever little large-scale political activity was taking place. Today, the political campaigns are limited to small corner meetings, press releases, advertisements on television channels and in newspapers, and television talk-shows and interviews.

In a sense then, things are pretty much back to where they were in terms of the ability of opposition parties to bring their workers out on the streets against the regime. The sort of momentum that the opposition hoped to build is not visible. There is no doubt a lot of anger, disgust, and disenchantment with the regime. But this kind of sentiment has been present for a couple of years now and yet the opposition politicians were not able to harness it and launch any kind of mass movement against the regime.

Therefore, if it is Musharraf’s assessment that he can get away with enough rigging to play puppeteer and that at worst there will be only the die-hard party workers that the regime will have to tackle on the streets of Pakistan, then he cannot be faulted for making such cynical calculations.

Even if Musharraf genuinely want to play with a straight bat, his minions – namely, Pervez Elahi and others like him – are desperate enough to steal the elections. In fact, given the mindset and political culture that people like Pervez Elahi represent, there is every chance that they will be unrestrained and quite blatant in trying to tilt the results in their favour.

To an extent, their ability to do so will depend on the army. Under the new army chief, the Pakistan army is on the face of it adopting a hands-off approach to the elections. But this sort of an approach is not going to be of much help. If anything, it is like giving complete freedom to the regime to do what it wants. If the army is really serious about a free and fair election, then it must actively ensure that no one is allowed to steal the elections.

The Pakistan army actually faces a no win situation: if the elections are stolen very brazenly, then there is every possibility that the army will have to douse the fires that engulf the country; on the other hand, if the results are scientifically managed then there will be prolonged political instability, something that Pakistan can ill-afford at this point in time. Clearly, very interesting times lie ahead for Pakistan.

Re: Government Rigging Plants Confirmed

Can you explain on how they can control/spoil govt sponsored rigging?

Re: Government Rigging Plants Confirmed


Did ZAB claim that elections were rigged? Please no comparing apples to oranges.

Re: Government Rigging Plants Confirmed

yes we saw that in November 2007 how the incompetent dictator cried foul and destroyed the whole civil society and brutalised people in order to save his kursi. How pathetic. Mush, the most incompetent ruler along with Zia

Re: Government Rigging Plants Confirmed

Daleel bhai. No need to panic. Zardari is coming to save Pakistan. Not long to wait now. :)

Re: Government Rigging Plants Confirmed

Ofcourse now that he is making deals with your Quaid # 1 Altaf Hussain and Quaid # 2 Mushy...

Re: Government Rigging Plans Confirmed

Again your rhetoric about ZAB. Why you drag ZAB in to every discussions? The thread is about rigging of elections in 2008, what this has to do with ZAB?. Tum jo un ke shaheed honay ke 30 saal baad bhi itni nafrat ki aag main ab tak trhap rahay ho, yeh tumari sehat ke leay accha nahin hay. By the way your Mush and Don of London are not to even equal to dirt of ZAB shoes.:D

Re: Government Rigging Plans Confirmed

Elections that have not happened yet... Do you see the lunacy of it? You are automatically assuming and passing the assumption off as a fact. Good Lord.

Re: Government Rigging Plans Confirmed

Listen to the above. Good heavens some people fail to see the reality even when it is right in front of them. :rolleyes:

Re: Government Rigging Plans Confirmed

That’s right. The excuses are already being made. :hehe: