ISLAMABAD: The deputy commissioner’s office in the eastern Pakistani city of Lahore has denied permission to jailed ex-premier Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) to hold a rally tomorrow, Saturday, to mark the one-year anniversary of a general election the party says was rigged.
Khan last month called on his party’s leaders and supporters to mark Feb. 8 as a “Black Day” and hold protests across the country to protest alleged rigging in polls last year. The PTI also sought permission to hold a main gathering on the grounds of the iconic Minar-e-Pakistan monument in Lahore on Saturday.
The national polls were marred by a countrywide shutdown of cellphone networks and delayed results, leading to widespread allegations of election manipulation by opposition parties like the PTI and the Jamaat-e-Islami (JI) headed by Hafiz Naeem-ur-Rehman. The caretaker government which oversaw the electoral exercise, and the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP), deny the charges. The US House of Representatives and several European countries have called on Islamabad to open a probe into the allegations, a move that Pakistan has thus far rejected.
In a notification dated Feb. 6, the Lahore deputy commissioner said he would not grant PTI permission to hold a rally at Minar-e-Pakistan due to, among other reasons, security concerns and in view of important events that were scheduled to take place in Lahore in February, including the ICC Champions Trophy, an eight-team cricket tournament that will be first global competition held in Pakistan in 28 years.
“Deputy commissioner Lahore refused to grant permission to PTI to hold jalsa [rally] at Minar-e-Pakistan Lahore on Feb 8, which is otherwise a democratic right of any political party holding a peaceful rally,” the PTI said in a statement sent to media.
Zulfikar Bukahri, a PTI spokesman, said the denial was “not exactly a surprise.”
“There is no freedom of any sort left in Pakistan,” he told Arab News.
In a separate text message to journalists, the PTI said it would hold a “massive” rally in Swabi in the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province where the party is in power, calling on supporters from other parts of Pakistan to gather there.
The party has held multiple rallies at the huge park surrounding the 70-meter tall monument since 2011. Many political parties in Pakistan’s history have used the Minar-e-Pakistan ground to hold protests and power shows.
Khan’s PTI candidates contested the Feb. 8 elections as independents after the party was barred from the polls. They won the most seats but fell short of the majority needed to form a government, which was made by a smattering of rival political parties led by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif. The party, as well as the Jamaat-e-Islami and other opposition outfits, have alleged mass rigging in the polls, which authorities deny.
Khan himself has been jailed in a slew of cases since August 2023 which he says are politically motivated to keep him out of office.