Pakistan voted in the country’s 12th General Elections under a bar on communication with mobile internet services disrupted and delays in the start of polling reported at several areas. Nearly 129 million Pakistanis were due to vote across 90,000 polling stations across the country amid hope that helping elect the 266 candidates would steer the country out of its current economic crisis.
Security concerns, already mounting in the face of rising terrorist attacks, were back on the forefront after the attack in Balochistan on Wednesday, and topped the list of government worries that resorted to its tried-and-tested formula of imposing a blackout on mobile internet connectivity.
The government deployed over 648,000 security personnel nationwide to ensure safety, but a drastically different political landscape played on the minds of voters.
Here is Business Recorder’s live coverage of the General Elections 2024 polling.
5:00pm
Polling ends.
5:00pm
“If you are in line at polling stations, stand your ground and demand your right to vote. It is your fundamental right,” Asif Ali Zardari’s daughter Aseefa Bhutto wrote on X.
4:55pm
“Mobile services are down due to extreme security reasons. Ensuring security is vitally important so that people turn out without fear,” the Ministry of Interior wrote on X.
3:53pm
The Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) said the time for casting votes for general elections 2024 will not be extended.
3:44pm
Jamaat-e-Islami’s Hafiz Naeemur Rehman said that polling for NA 245, 246, 248 and 295 had not yet started.
“There is a limit to incompetence. Fake result will not be accepted,” he wrote on X.
3:43pm
Business Recorder was informed that Karachi’s NA-248 ran out of ballot books in the women’s polling booths.
3:32pm
Karachi NA-236 PTI candidate Alamgir Khan posted on X that polling had finally begun at Askari 4.
3:08pm
Karachi Mayor Murtaza Wahab cast his vote.
3:05pm
Chief Election Commissioner (CEC) Sikandar Sultan Raja said on Thursday that he was in constant touch with the government over suspension of cellular services.
Talking to the media in Islamabad, the CEC said he was cognizant of the difficulties faced by voters due to the suspension of mobile phone services.
The CEC said people should have checked their voting details by messaging on 8300 before the polling day.
When asked if the disruption of cellular services would slow the down the voting process, he said it was too early to talk about the turnout.
3:00pm
Sindh Chief Minister House shared a post in which Caretaker Sindh Chief Minister Justice Maqbool Baqar (Retd) can be seen casting his vote at Government Boys Secondary School, Karachi.
2:40pm
Ministry of Interior’s post shows Caretaker Interior Minister Dr Gohar Ejaz visit its control room and polling station where he was briefed regarding the security situation.
2:22pm
Jamaat-e-Islami’s Hafiz Naeemur Rehman cast his vote in his North Nazimabad constituency.
2:16pm
Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf’s Barrister Syed Ali Zafar announced that on behalf of his party and public who are exercising right to vote for freedom, he has approached the Election Commission of Pakistan against mobile/internet closure.
Ensuring free and fair elections is ECP’s responsibility, he said.
2:03pm
Jamaat-e-Islami’s Siraj-ul-Haq cast his vote.
2:00pm