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Economic Development

The Birmingham man who helped millions of Pakistan women vote for the first time

It's been an election hit by bombings, assassinations and even one of the candidates being seriously injured after falling from a temporary lift.

 

It's been an election hit by bombings, assassinations and even one of the candidates being seriously injured after falling from a temporary lift.

At the heart of it has been a Birmingham man who this week spoke of his pride at helping to banish corruption from Pakistan elections and enabling millions of women to vote freely in the country’s poll for the first time.

Sakander Ali, who works for the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ government’s International Development department, was an international observer at the weekend General Election which confirmed a big win for former prime minister Nawaz Sharif’s party.

Figures released by the country’s election commission showed that Mr Sharif’s Pakistan Muslim League-N party was set to gain a majority in the national assembly, setting him up to be prime minister for the third time.

The commission said Mr Sharif’s party won 123 of the 272 directly elected national assembly seats combined with support from various independent candidates to give it an outright majority.

Mr Ali, who was born in Mirpur, Pakistan, moved to Birmingham as a child where he attended school in Washwood Heath.

However, he returned to his homeland to join an EU mission observing the poll, which marked the country’s first transition of power from one democratic government to the next.

He helped make sure the polls in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Fata provinces, which included dangerous Khyber and Peshawar areas near to the mountainous borders of Afghanistan, were largely trouble-free despite a murderous attempt to disrupt the process by the Taliban. He was also involved with the election in the Punjab. Male voters in Khyber totalled 7.01 million and women voters 5.26 million. According to statistics released by the provincial office of the Election Commission of Pakistan, 10,514 polling stations comprising 28,507 polling booths were used in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Fata for the elections.