The European Union is
deploying monitors to observe the electoral process in Pakistan, for the
country's May elections. But none of those monitors will travel to the
country's high-risk regions.
Michael Gahler, chief
of the European Union's Election Observation Mission to Pakistan, admits that
none of the 110 monitors they will have working in Pakistan during the May 11
national elections will be present in areas where there is a security threat.
But Gahler played down
the impact the EU absence from those areas would have on the evaluation of the
country's electoral process, saying local monitors would be present.
"The fact that
many local observers will also be on the ground, I think, gives the confidence
for voters in these areas that they can freely cast their vote," he
said. "That is my conviction."
Human-rights activist
Tahira Abdullah says the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan and other
independent national observers such as the Free and Fair Election Network would
be present in high-risk areas.
But she says the
absence of the EU observation mission in those areas will be strongly felt.
"The European
Union will have a grave hole in its own report," she said. "I would
like to point out here that the areas they are not going to are the very same
areas where women are being barred from voting"
According to the
Election Commission of Pakistan, 10 to 15 million of the 85 million voters live
in Pakistan's so-called sensitive areas, such as the Federally Administered
Tribal Areas on the northwest border with Afghanistan, in the restive southern
province of Baluchistan and in certain areas of the violent city of Karachi.
The country director
for U.N. Women in Pakistan, Lena Lindberg, told VOA in some of the higher-risk
areas extremists have threatened any woman who dares to cast a vote. But
she says for the first time, the Election Commission will segregate ballots by
gender.
"And therefore, we
will now be able to see exactly how many women voted, not only for the whole
country, and the overall turnout, but also for every polling station," she
said. "So from now on it will be possible in Pakistan to see if there are
polling stations where there were nearly no women voters at all, maybe even
zero women voters."
That will allow Pakistan
to focus in on those areas in future elections.
In a recent interview
with VOA, Election Commission of Pakistan Additional Secretary Afzal Khan said,
given the security situation, it was better to have fewer observers in harm's
way. But, he also said it is crucial that voters accept the election
results as free and fair.
"... as far as
observation is concerned, this election commission, we need certification of
the voters, if they are satisfied we are satisfied, if they are happy we are
happy, we need the trust and certification of clean elections by the political
parties, losers and the winners," he said.
According to Pakistan's
Foreign Ministry, in addition to the European Union, the U.S.-based National
Democratic Institute is organizing an international team of 57 short and
long-term observers. Several governments, including the United States,
Japan and Turkey, are also expected to send in observers.
Sources :
http://www.voanews.com/content/european-union-pakistan-election-monitors/1637450.html
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