LAHORE: Sirajul Haq, leader of Jamaat-e-Islami, emphasized Sunday the importance of impartiality in Pakistan’s institutions, such as the judiciary, security apparatus, and Election Commission of Pakistan, in order to ensure fair and transparent general elections in the future.
The head of the JI also blamed the PML-N and the PPP for the country’s problems and said in a statement that they would not create an alliance with the JI.
“We will ensure that the people’s will is honored in the upcoming elections,” he declared with conviction.
The platform of peace, development, and prosperity will be put up by Siraj’s party in the upcoming general elections. As he went on to say, JI would deliver the news of “real change” to the masses.
When asked what his party would do if elected, the JI chairman said they would declare a health and education emergency. Additionally, he promised to fix the country’s money problems and wasteful spending.
Siraj went on to say that his party would establish centers to train and rehabilitate people who beg. The head of the JI insisted that they would do away with the eight-kanal mansions that serve as the residences of the governor and commissioner.
According to his assertion, “a ladla [blue-eyed] and a super ladla” are presently residing in an exclusive setting. If all political parties were not given an equal opportunity to campaign in the next elections, the JI chairman said, the next administration would be unable to do its job.
Furthermore, he insisted that his party would reject the outcomes in the absence of guarantees of fair elections. At a recent social media convention in Peshawar, Siraj made the bold claim that the next general elections are slated for February 8. He described it as a “day of salvation” for the nation, promising that “anti-people parties” would be defeated on that fateful day.
The threat that dynamic politics poses to our nation and its citizens is comparable to that of cancer. “Instead of making progress, the country went backwards by decades,” he added, referring to the seven times two families controlled Pakistan.
According to Siraj, almost 110 million people in the nation are now living in poverty. The economic and political climate of the country, he continued, was brought about by these “incompetent” individuals.
The head of the JI insisted that the people’s votes, and not “favouritism,” will determine the composition of the country’s future government.
These two families, he said, had a “monopoly in the country” and their political parties were corrupt, he added.