was remarkable how many expectations they ended up
defying that day. One recalls the unannounced blackout of all mobile
communication services, enforced by the authorities shortly before polls
opened, which had left people without access to vital election-related
information and unable to contact their friends and families.
It was not enough to deter the over 59 million citizens’
intent on having their voices heard that day. One also recalls the smug
predictions of television pundits and the surveys fed to the media in the
run-up to Election Day. None of them prepared the nation for the coup ordinary
Pakistanis pulled off merely with the help of a stamp and a ballot paper.
No observer can honestly deny that the last election’s results were
highly unexpected.
Considerable effort was made to keep one party out of the
race. The party’s leadership was jailed, its workers picked up, its electoral
symbol withdrawn, and its candidates, even after being forced to declare
themselves independents, not allowed to campaign.
If the previous elections were manipulated — perhaps by the
same elements — to bring the PTI to power, they went out of their way to ensure
that it did not have any chance this time around.
Despite all their machinations, however, the PTI ended up
winning an unexpectedly large chunk of the popular vote.
The results announced two things: one, that Pakistan’s youth
had finally arrived on the political scene, and two, that ordinary voters had
overwhelmingly rejected the narratives set by the powers of the day. In this
sense, the 2024 election was indeed a historic one.
Much went wrong after February 08, 2024, mainly because
responsible individuals within the Pakistani state refused to come to
terms with the country’s changed realities.
However, though the injustices that followed the last
general election cannot be forgotten, it is equally important to start thinking
about what must now be done to mitigate their effects.
The
country has continued to march on a path of implosion, unable to contain the
dissonance created by a conflict between what those controlling the state want
and what the people want for themselves. Unless this fundamental conflict is
resolved, the country will not be at peace with itself.
A war of egos has been fought between a handfuls of
individuals at the cost of the well-being of millions of ordinary Pakistanis.
This unnecessary war must be called to an end. The people of Pakistan have been
wronged for too long. They need a change.
Dawn Editorial, February 08, 2025
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