Pakistan regulator completes printing of 260 million ballot papers for Feb. 8 national elections

Workers prepare ballot boxes before sending it to different polling stations for the upcoming general elections, at the Election Commission office in Peshawar on February 4, 2024. (AFP)
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  • More than 17,000 candidates are contesting elections for 266 national, 593 provincial seats
  • A total of 128.6 million Pakistanis are expected to exercise their right to vote in the elections

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s election oversight body has completed the printing of 260 million ballot papers for 859 national and provincial assembly constituencies across the country, it said on Sunday, three days before the South Asian country heads to national elections.
Pakistan is scheduled to hold the elections on February 8, with 17,800 candidates running for 266 national and 593 provincial seats and a total of 128.6 million voters expected to exercise their right to vote in the elections.
The Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) said it had finished the printing process even in the constituencies where ballot papers had to be reprinted due to court verdicts on petitions filed by political parties and candidates with regard to election nominations.
“Now the process of delivery of ballot papers has begun across the country which will be completed by tomorrow (Monday),” the ECP said in a statement.
In the 2018 general elections, the ECP said it had printed 220 million ballot papers, using 800 tons of special security paper.
“However, 2,170 tons of paper were used for the printing of 260 million ballot papers for the 2024 general elections, mainly due to the increased number of candidates in the constituencies which is 150 times more than the 2018 elections,” the ECP said.
The regulator said it encountered many challenges, including court cases, during the process of printing of ballot papers, but fulfilled its responsibility in limited time.
“By timely completing the printing of ballot papers, it has been ensured that all voters can exercise their right to vote in the February 8 elections,” it added.
Like the past several elections, the upcoming polls in Pakistan have also been marred by allegations of pre-poll rigging, mainly by jailed former prime minister Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party.
Several members of the PTI, which says it is facing a state-backed crackdown, were able to submit their election nominations after challenging their rejection by the election regulator in courts.
Khan, who has been in jail on graft charges since August and was sentenced in multiple cases this week, says the campaign against him is an attempt by the caretaker government and the military to keep him from returning to power after analysts say he fell out with the generals that led to his ouster in a parliamentary no-trust vote in April 2022.
The military denies the allegation, while the caretaker government overseeing the polls says it has no favorites.