Key Points
- Chatha has admitted to election rigging.
- His confession has spiked tensions over the legitimacy of the February general election results.
- It comes amid nationwide protests over claims that the general election results were unfair.
Liaqat Ali Chatha — commissioner of the garrison city of Rawalpindi, where the country’s powerful military has its headquarters — said he would hand himself over to police.
Liaqat Ali Chatha said he had supervised the rigging of votes in Rawalpindi, while also implicating the head of the election commission and the country’s top judge. Source: AAP / Sohail Shahzad/EPA
There have been widespread allegations of rigging after authorities switched off the country’s mobile phone network on election day and the count took more than 24 hours.
“For committing such a heinous crime, I will hand myself over to the police,” he said, also implicating the head of the election commission and the country’s top judge.
Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party called nationwide protests against the alleged rigging on Saturday.
Supporters of the Grand Democratic Alliance protest against what they call vote-rigging in some constituencies in the parliamentary elections, on the outskirts of Hyderabad, Pakistan on Friday. Source: AAP / Pervez Masih/AP
A small number of supporters took to the streets in major urban centres, with the largest gathering of around 4,000 people in its stronghold northern city of Peshawar.
By Saturday night, social media network X was disrupted across Pakistan, according to watchdog NetBlocks.
But it has been unwilling to enter a coalition with its opponents, paving the way for PML-N to form the next government.
Source Agencies