The overall quality of General Election 2013 indicates a significant improvement over previous elections. Although it appears that different local powerful actors negatively influenced the quality of election in Urban Sindh, especially Karachi, rural Sindh and certain constituencies in the Punjab, there is no evidence at this stage which suggests a planned manipulation of polls by any State institution unlike the strongly suspected government interference in many of the past elections. Many past elections suffered from a deeply flawed pre-poll phase when government of the day and the intelligence agencies heavily rigged the process.
The legal framework of the election, quality of electoral rolls, independence of the ECP, integrity of the ECP, independence of Judiciary, independence of news media from government influence, competitiveness of the election (manifested in the number of candidates and political parties taking part in election) and the arrangement made by the ECP through mobile phone SMS service to inform voters of their polling stations and associated details were eight parameters which received the top score of either 4 or 5 among 17 parameters of Pre-Poll phase.
Quality of scrutiny of candidates, ECP mechanism to check overspending by candidates and political parties, ability of the governments to maintain peace and order during the election campaign, independence of media from foreign and commercial interests were five parameters of pre-poll phase which received low scores of 1 or 2.
None of the 15 parameters of Polling-Day Phase could receive a score of 4 or 5. Training of the Polling Staff, Management capacity of the ECP for the polling day, transmission of election results from polling stations to Returning Officer and from returning Officers to the ECP, Arrangements for transportation and Safety of polling material and staff, transparency of consolidation of election results at the constituency level, peace and order on the polling day were nine parameters out of total 15 in Polling-day phase which received low scores of 1 or 2.
PILDAT assessment advised that the ECP should dispassionately analyse the weaknesses and shortcomings experienced during the polling-day and post-poll phases and initiate actions to address the flaws ahead of Local Government Election.
Political parties and unsuccessful candidates who have complaints about the quality of election should focus on legal and constitutional remedies and fight their cases in the election tribunals and superior judiciary with all the proofs and evidences available with them instead of resorting to street agitation. Timely decision by the election tribunals within the stipulated period of four months will greatly reinforce public confidence in the electoral and judicial systems. |