Pakistan regulator receives nearly 450,000 postal ballot applications for Feb. 8 polls

Commuters move past the election banners of Muttahida Qaumi Movement-Pakistan (MQM-P) and Jamaat-e-Islami (JI) parties hung over a street ahead of the upcoming general elections, in Karachi on January 24, 2024. (AFP)
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  • Postal balloting allows government officials, security personnel and other specified individuals to vote ahead of polling day 
  • Highest number of postal ballot requests for national, provincial elections received from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s election regulator has received nearly 450,000 applications for postal ballots from across the country for both national and provincial assembly elections, it said on Thursday.
The provision allows voting ahead of polling day to government officials, soldiers and other government servants as well as their spouses and children who live outside of their constituencies. Individuals in detention and those with physical disabilities, provided they hold a computerized national identity card (CNIC) with a disability logo issued by the National Database and Registration Authority (NADRA), are also eligible.
The Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) initiated the postal ballot process on Jan. 6 for eligible individuals to get ballot papers for both national and provincial assembly elections, scheduled for Feb. 8. The regulator set Jan. 22 as the deadline to submit applications.
“The total number of applications received for postal ballot papers is 449,287, including 206,533 for the national assembly and 242,754 for the four provincial assemblies,” an ECP document seen by Arab News said.
The document showed the highest number of applications, 154,050, had been received from the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province for both national and provincial assemblies, followed by Punjab with 147,860, Balochistan with 96,308, and Sindh with 51,069 applications.
“For the National Assembly, election officials received 73,586 applications from Punjab, 72,769 from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, 35,758 from Balochistan, and 24,420 from Sindh,” the document read.
The ECP received 81,281 postal ballot applications for provincial assembly elections in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, 74,274 for Punjab, 60,550 for Balochistan, and 26,649 for Sindh provincial polls.
According to the Elections Act 2017, upon receiving an application from a voter, the returning officer is required to send a ballot paper and an envelope to the voter by post. The envelope should include a form of certificate of posting on its face, indicating the posting date, to be filled in by the relevant post office official when the voter sends it.
Once a postal ballot is received, the act says, a voter is supposed to record their vote as prescribed and then post the ballot paper to the relevant returning officer in the provided envelope, ensuring it reaches its destination before the consolidation of election results.