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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
January 8, 2013

Contact: Political Parties Joint Committee on FATA Reforms, fataparties@gmail.com
         @FATAparties
         http://facebook.com/FATAparties

      POLITICAL PARTIES UNITED IN PUSH FOR FAIR ELECTIONS IN FATA

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — As political parties prepare to participate in elections in FATA for the
first time in history, the Political Parties Joint Committee on FATA reforms (FATA Committee)
highlights five key concerns that require urgent action by the Election Commission of Pakistan
(ECP) to ensure fair, transparent and accessible general elections in FATA.

The 10 political parties making up the FATA Committee recommend that the National Database
and Registration Authority (NADRA) and the ECP take swift measures in FATA to increase
Computerized National Identity Card (CNIC) registration and voter registration. Historically
disenfranchised, FATA voters deserve increased efforts to facilitate their participation in the
upcoming general elections.

The FATA Committee also recommends that the ECP allow internally displaced persons (IDPs)
to cast votes from camps and host communities for candidates in their home constituency.
Political parties also urge government authorities to ensure that judicial officers from
neighboring settled districts serve as returning officers and district returning officers, just as is
planned for elections throughout Pakistan.

In line with other recommendations from political parties, the FATA Committee requests that the
ECP ensure polling stations are within two kilometers of voter homes as required by the
Supreme Court. The FATA Joint Committee recommends the ECP regularly meet with the
leadership of political parties in FATA to work together in addressing the numerous and complex
electoral challenges in FATA.

In a letter delivered today to the ECP and NADRA, the Political Parties Joint Committee on
FATA Reforms submitted the five consensus recommendations listed below for their immediate
consideration and action. The letter was also delivered to President of Pakistan Asif Ali Zardari,
Governor of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Syed Masood Kausar, and the SAFRON Ministry secretary.




                                                  1
1. NADRA and the ECP should increase efforts to register FATA voters - A targeted
   campaign should be launched immediately to provide FATA citizens with Computerized
   National Identity Cards (CNIC) and to register them as voters with the ECP. The campaign
   should place special emphasis on women throughout FATA and on internally displaced
   persons (IDPs) living in camps inside FATA and in adjacent districts. By opening
   additional offices, deploying mobile registration units, and expediting processes, the
   issuing of CNICs for these groups should be improved significantly. The ECP and NADRA
   should communicate deployment schedules of additional registration efforts directly with
   political party leadership and also work together closely and as quickly as possible to
   ensure that all those receiving new CNICs are also registered to vote.

2. ECP should allow absentee voting for FATA IDPs - More than 150,000 internally displaced
   FATA citizens face voter disenfranchisement in upcoming general elections. International
   law is clear about the voting rights of internally displaced persons (IDPs) and to ensure
   equal access to democratic participation, all IDPs from FATA should be provided with the
   opportunity to vote. Specifically, all citizens residing in camps should be permitted to cast
   their vote for the candidate of their choice in their home constituency in FATA. For
   example, an IDP originally from Bara in Khyber Agency but currently living in the Jalozai
   IDP camp in Nowshera should be permitted to cast his vote in the NA-46 election from a
   polling station inside the camp. Due to the security situation, many IDPs from FATA are
   prohibited from returning home. These voters should be provided with an alternate
   mechanism for voting in home constituency elections even while living currently in an IDP
   camp elsewhere. At a minimum, absentee voting should be facilitated for FATA IDPs
   living outside their normal constituencies in the following camps and host communities:
   Togh Serai camp, New Durrani camp, Jalozai camp, D.I. Khan, Hangu, Kohat, Kurram,
   Peshawar and Tank.

   The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR, Article 21), the International
   Convention on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR, Article 25) and the United Nations
   Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement (UNGPID) indicate that IDPs must be
   provided the right and opportunity to vote in elections, whether or not they are living in
   camps. Pakistan is a signatory to the UDHR and the ICCPR and therefore obligated to
   protect the political and human rights of its citizens in FATA.

3. Judicial officers should serve as election officials in FATA - On November 17, 2012, the
   National Judicial Policy Making Committee’s (NJPMC) decided to allow judicial officers
   to serve as ECP returning officers and district returning officers in the upcoming general
   elections. To ensure equitable election administration throughout Pakistan, this decision
   should also apply to FATA. As there are no judicial officers in FATA, officers from
   adjacent districts (Lower Dir, Malakand, Charsadda, Peshawar, Nowshera, Kohat, Karak,
   Bannu, Lakki Marwat, Tank, and D.I. Khan) should be sent to FATA to serve as election
   officials.




                                              2
4. ECP should provide polling stations two kilometres from voters - As directed by the
    Supreme Court of Pakistan in Constitutional Petition No. 87 of 2011 (order dated June 8,
    2012), article 28, page 31, polling stations should not be “at a distance of more than two
    kilometres from the place of residence of voters”. To ensure equal access for voters
    throughout Pakistan, this decision should also apply to FATA.

 5. ECP should engage directly with political party leaders in FATA - The FATA Committee
    and agency-level political party leaders in FATA are open and available for direct
    negotiations and problem-solving with the ECP regarding the implementation of the
    recommendations above. FATA voices are typically excluded from national-level dialogue
    with political parties and should be included in direct provincial-level outreach initiated by
    the ECP. Additionally, close coordination between ECP officials and political party leaders
    at the FATA agency level will allow the identification and mitigation of other local election
    problems as they arise.

The Political Parties Joint Committee on FATA Reforms (FATA Committee) was established in
2010 to identify and advocate for areas of consensus on reform priorities, including amendments
to the Frontier Crimes Regulation (FCR) and the extension of the Political Parties Order to
FATA. The committee engages in discussions with stakeholders from FATA as a way to build
consensus, increase awareness and promote dialogue on existing and future reforms in the tribal
areas. With complete support from political party leadership, 10 political parties are represented
on the FATA Committee: Awami National Party (ANP), Jamaat-e-Islami (JI), Jamiat Ulema-e-
Islam F (JUI-F), Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM), National Party (NP), Pashtoonkhwa Milli
Awami Party (PkMAP), Pakistan Muslim League Nawaz (PML-N), Pakistan Muslim League
Quaid-e-Azam (PML), Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) and Qaumi Watan Party (QWP).


  High resolution photographs of FATA Committee members and events: http://goo.gl/GNmxx


Political Parties Joint Committee on FATA Reforms
Member Information:

Awami National Party (ANP)
Latif Afridi, Vice President KP
Bushra Gohar, MNA, Central Vice President
Arbab Tahir, General Secretary, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
Nawabzada Mohsin Ali Khan, Deputy Secretary General Central

Jamaat-e-Islami (JI)
Mohammad Ibrahim, Professor and Provincial Ameer
Sahibzada Haroon Rashid, Ameer FATA
Zarnoor Afridi, Naib Ameer FATA



                                                3
Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam Fazl (JUI-F)
Mohammad Jalal ud din, Advocate, Former Ambassador
Abdul Jalil Jan, Information Secretary, KP
Mufti Abdul Shakoor, Deputy General Secretary KP
Abdur-Rashid, General Secretary Bajaur

Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM)
Syed Asif Hasnain, MNA
Mohammad Rehan Hashmi, MNA

National Party (NP)
Dr. Malik Baloch, President
Senator Mir Hasil Khan Bizenju, Vice President
Mukhtar Bacha, Provincial President, KP
Idrees Kamal, Provincial General Secretary, KP

Pashtoonkhwa Milli Awami Party (PkMAP)
Akram Shah Khan, Central Secretary General
Mukhtar Khan Yousafzai, Provincial President, KP
Raza Mohammad Raza, Information Secretary

Pakistan Muslim League (PML)
Ajmal Khan Wazir, Central Senior Vice President

Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N)
Rehmat Salam Khattak, General Secretary, KP
Arsallah Khan Hoti, Spokesperson, KP
Nasir Kamal Marwat, Vice President

Pakistan People’s Party (PPP)
Senator Farhatullah Babar, Spokeperson, President of Pakistan
Kiramat Ullah Chagharmati, Speaker, KP Assembly
Rahim Dad Khan, Senior Minister, KP
Senator Sardar Ali
Mirza M. Jihadi, Advisor SAFRON

Qaumi Watan Party (QWP)
Anisa Zeb Tahirkheli, General Secretary
Sikandar Hayat Sherpao, MPA, President, KP
Asad Afridi, President, FATA
Usman Ali Khalil, Provincial Vice President

  High resolution photographs of FATA Committee members and events: http://goo.gl/GNmxx

         fataparties@gmail.com | @FATAparties | http://facebook.com/FATAparties

                                              ###

                                               4

Weitere ähnliche Inhalte

News Release-FATA Committee elections recommendations 2012 December (English)

  • 1. FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE January 8, 2013 Contact: Political Parties Joint Committee on FATA Reforms, fataparties@gmail.com @FATAparties http://facebook.com/FATAparties POLITICAL PARTIES UNITED IN PUSH FOR FAIR ELECTIONS IN FATA ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — As political parties prepare to participate in elections in FATA for the first time in history, the Political Parties Joint Committee on FATA reforms (FATA Committee) highlights five key concerns that require urgent action by the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) to ensure fair, transparent and accessible general elections in FATA. The 10 political parties making up the FATA Committee recommend that the National Database and Registration Authority (NADRA) and the ECP take swift measures in FATA to increase Computerized National Identity Card (CNIC) registration and voter registration. Historically disenfranchised, FATA voters deserve increased efforts to facilitate their participation in the upcoming general elections. The FATA Committee also recommends that the ECP allow internally displaced persons (IDPs) to cast votes from camps and host communities for candidates in their home constituency. Political parties also urge government authorities to ensure that judicial officers from neighboring settled districts serve as returning officers and district returning officers, just as is planned for elections throughout Pakistan. In line with other recommendations from political parties, the FATA Committee requests that the ECP ensure polling stations are within two kilometers of voter homes as required by the Supreme Court. The FATA Joint Committee recommends the ECP regularly meet with the leadership of political parties in FATA to work together in addressing the numerous and complex electoral challenges in FATA. In a letter delivered today to the ECP and NADRA, the Political Parties Joint Committee on FATA Reforms submitted the five consensus recommendations listed below for their immediate consideration and action. The letter was also delivered to President of Pakistan Asif Ali Zardari, Governor of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Syed Masood Kausar, and the SAFRON Ministry secretary. 1
  • 2. 1. NADRA and the ECP should increase efforts to register FATA voters - A targeted campaign should be launched immediately to provide FATA citizens with Computerized National Identity Cards (CNIC) and to register them as voters with the ECP. The campaign should place special emphasis on women throughout FATA and on internally displaced persons (IDPs) living in camps inside FATA and in adjacent districts. By opening additional offices, deploying mobile registration units, and expediting processes, the issuing of CNICs for these groups should be improved significantly. The ECP and NADRA should communicate deployment schedules of additional registration efforts directly with political party leadership and also work together closely and as quickly as possible to ensure that all those receiving new CNICs are also registered to vote. 2. ECP should allow absentee voting for FATA IDPs - More than 150,000 internally displaced FATA citizens face voter disenfranchisement in upcoming general elections. International law is clear about the voting rights of internally displaced persons (IDPs) and to ensure equal access to democratic participation, all IDPs from FATA should be provided with the opportunity to vote. Specifically, all citizens residing in camps should be permitted to cast their vote for the candidate of their choice in their home constituency in FATA. For example, an IDP originally from Bara in Khyber Agency but currently living in the Jalozai IDP camp in Nowshera should be permitted to cast his vote in the NA-46 election from a polling station inside the camp. Due to the security situation, many IDPs from FATA are prohibited from returning home. These voters should be provided with an alternate mechanism for voting in home constituency elections even while living currently in an IDP camp elsewhere. At a minimum, absentee voting should be facilitated for FATA IDPs living outside their normal constituencies in the following camps and host communities: Togh Serai camp, New Durrani camp, Jalozai camp, D.I. Khan, Hangu, Kohat, Kurram, Peshawar and Tank. The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR, Article 21), the International Convention on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR, Article 25) and the United Nations Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement (UNGPID) indicate that IDPs must be provided the right and opportunity to vote in elections, whether or not they are living in camps. Pakistan is a signatory to the UDHR and the ICCPR and therefore obligated to protect the political and human rights of its citizens in FATA. 3. Judicial officers should serve as election officials in FATA - On November 17, 2012, the National Judicial Policy Making Committee’s (NJPMC) decided to allow judicial officers to serve as ECP returning officers and district returning officers in the upcoming general elections. To ensure equitable election administration throughout Pakistan, this decision should also apply to FATA. As there are no judicial officers in FATA, officers from adjacent districts (Lower Dir, Malakand, Charsadda, Peshawar, Nowshera, Kohat, Karak, Bannu, Lakki Marwat, Tank, and D.I. Khan) should be sent to FATA to serve as election officials. 2
  • 3. 4. ECP should provide polling stations two kilometres from voters - As directed by the Supreme Court of Pakistan in Constitutional Petition No. 87 of 2011 (order dated June 8, 2012), article 28, page 31, polling stations should not be “at a distance of more than two kilometres from the place of residence of voters”. To ensure equal access for voters throughout Pakistan, this decision should also apply to FATA. 5. ECP should engage directly with political party leaders in FATA - The FATA Committee and agency-level political party leaders in FATA are open and available for direct negotiations and problem-solving with the ECP regarding the implementation of the recommendations above. FATA voices are typically excluded from national-level dialogue with political parties and should be included in direct provincial-level outreach initiated by the ECP. Additionally, close coordination between ECP officials and political party leaders at the FATA agency level will allow the identification and mitigation of other local election problems as they arise. The Political Parties Joint Committee on FATA Reforms (FATA Committee) was established in 2010 to identify and advocate for areas of consensus on reform priorities, including amendments to the Frontier Crimes Regulation (FCR) and the extension of the Political Parties Order to FATA. The committee engages in discussions with stakeholders from FATA as a way to build consensus, increase awareness and promote dialogue on existing and future reforms in the tribal areas. With complete support from political party leadership, 10 political parties are represented on the FATA Committee: Awami National Party (ANP), Jamaat-e-Islami (JI), Jamiat Ulema-e- Islam F (JUI-F), Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM), National Party (NP), Pashtoonkhwa Milli Awami Party (PkMAP), Pakistan Muslim League Nawaz (PML-N), Pakistan Muslim League Quaid-e-Azam (PML), Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) and Qaumi Watan Party (QWP). High resolution photographs of FATA Committee members and events: http://goo.gl/GNmxx Political Parties Joint Committee on FATA Reforms Member Information: Awami National Party (ANP) Latif Afridi, Vice President KP Bushra Gohar, MNA, Central Vice President Arbab Tahir, General Secretary, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Nawabzada Mohsin Ali Khan, Deputy Secretary General Central Jamaat-e-Islami (JI) Mohammad Ibrahim, Professor and Provincial Ameer Sahibzada Haroon Rashid, Ameer FATA Zarnoor Afridi, Naib Ameer FATA 3
  • 4. Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam Fazl (JUI-F) Mohammad Jalal ud din, Advocate, Former Ambassador Abdul Jalil Jan, Information Secretary, KP Mufti Abdul Shakoor, Deputy General Secretary KP Abdur-Rashid, General Secretary Bajaur Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) Syed Asif Hasnain, MNA Mohammad Rehan Hashmi, MNA National Party (NP) Dr. Malik Baloch, President Senator Mir Hasil Khan Bizenju, Vice President Mukhtar Bacha, Provincial President, KP Idrees Kamal, Provincial General Secretary, KP Pashtoonkhwa Milli Awami Party (PkMAP) Akram Shah Khan, Central Secretary General Mukhtar Khan Yousafzai, Provincial President, KP Raza Mohammad Raza, Information Secretary Pakistan Muslim League (PML) Ajmal Khan Wazir, Central Senior Vice President Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) Rehmat Salam Khattak, General Secretary, KP Arsallah Khan Hoti, Spokesperson, KP Nasir Kamal Marwat, Vice President Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) Senator Farhatullah Babar, Spokeperson, President of Pakistan Kiramat Ullah Chagharmati, Speaker, KP Assembly Rahim Dad Khan, Senior Minister, KP Senator Sardar Ali Mirza M. Jihadi, Advisor SAFRON Qaumi Watan Party (QWP) Anisa Zeb Tahirkheli, General Secretary Sikandar Hayat Sherpao, MPA, President, KP Asad Afridi, President, FATA Usman Ali Khalil, Provincial Vice President High resolution photographs of FATA Committee members and events: http://goo.gl/GNmxx fataparties@gmail.com | @FATAparties | http://facebook.com/FATAparties ### 4