Pakistani
ex-PM Nawaz Sharif has been holding talks with party colleagues on
forming a government, after claiming victory in parliamentary elections.
Unofficial results suggest a big lead for Mr Sharif's Muslim League (PML-N), though he may need support to govern.Former cricketer Imran Khan, who could be the main opposition leader, said he was pleased with the high turnout but disappointed about reports of rigging.
The ruling Pakistan People's Party (PPP) seems to have been badly beaten.
It was one of several secular parties unable to campaign freely due to Taliban attacks.
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Nawaz Sharif's priorities will be rejuvenating the economy and improving security - these are both areas that require some speedy but difficult decision-making”
Most of the remaining PPP seats look likely to be in its heartland of Sindh province.
Saturday's election should pave the way for the country's first transition from one elected government to another.The poll was generally seen as having passed off successfully, but violence on Saturday claimed at least 24 lives.
An election commission spokesman said turnout had been around 60%. In 2008 it was 44%.
'Path of democracy' Mr Sharif is expected to become prime minister for the third time, his last period in office ending 14 years ago in a military coup followed by his trial and exile.
The BBC's Mike Wooldridge in Islamabad says he is already getting down to business, starting work on putting together a government.
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Nawaz Sharif
- Born in 1949 to family of a prominent Lahore industrialist
- Served as Punjab's chief minister from 1985 to 1990 under military dictator Zia ul-Haq
- Previous terms as prime minister 1990-1993 and 1997-1999
- Deposed by Gen Musharraf and given a jail term
- Went into exile in Saudi Arabia before returning in 2007
- Seen as conservative and pro-business
Our correspondent says that even
if his PML-N does not have an outright majority, its projected margin of
victory suggests it will be in a much stronger position than the PPP
was at the head of the outgoing coalition.
Mr Sharif should at least not need to seek the support of his
main rivals, the PPP and Imran Khan's Movement for Justice (PTI),
analysts say.Soon after polls closed, he claimed victory and joined supporters celebrating in his stronghold, the north-eastern city of Lahore.
Muslim League voter Asma Usmani in Islamabad praised the poll.
"I was expecting that PML-N would win because I voted for them. These were very fair elections and the election commission did very well," she said.
Meanwhile Mr Khan spoke publicly for the first time since the election. He is in hospital with a fractured spine after a fall at an election rally last Tuesday.
"I congratulate the entire nation for taking part in such a massive democratic process. We are moving forward on the path of democracy," he said.
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After so many stories about stuffed, sick, even dead tigers,
the metaphor was perhaps irresistible. "The tiger roars again" was the
headline in Dawn newspaper in reference to the mascot of Nawaz Sharif's
Pakistan Muslim League.
Other words in Pakistan's new political lexicon were also inescapable. But the "tsunami" of support Imran Khan predicted would sweep him to power was, on the front page of the Urdu language Nawa-e-Waqt, used to describe Mr Sharif's surge.
Mr Khan undeniably made a difference. It's a remarkable rise from the lone seat his Movement for Justice won in the 2002 poll. And he energised a campaign that inspired new voters, and pushed rivals to re-focus their own pitches to the public.
But all the talk now is of Mr Sharif's comeback, and whether Pakistan itself can move forward after an election which toppled some of the old guard, but gave others another chance.
Other words in Pakistan's new political lexicon were also inescapable. But the "tsunami" of support Imran Khan predicted would sweep him to power was, on the front page of the Urdu language Nawa-e-Waqt, used to describe Mr Sharif's surge.
Mr Khan undeniably made a difference. It's a remarkable rise from the lone seat his Movement for Justice won in the 2002 poll. And he energised a campaign that inspired new voters, and pushed rivals to re-focus their own pitches to the public.
But all the talk now is of Mr Sharif's comeback, and whether Pakistan itself can move forward after an election which toppled some of the old guard, but gave others another chance.
"Now there is awareness among the people of Pakistan that their fate is in their hands."
He praised Pakistan's women for voting in unprecedented
numbers, and said he would "issue a white paper" in response to
allegations of vote-rigging by members of his party.But some of Mr Khan's supporters said the vote was rigged against them.
A PTI spokesman said the PML-N had been involved in large-scale rigging in parts of Lahore, and many women were not allowed to vote.
"These can't be called fair elections," said one supporter, businessman Bilal Saleem.
"PTI should have got more seats in Punjab. It was Imran Khan versus Punjab political machinery."
But PML-N's election officer denied the allegations.
"We don't go to these levels," Amna Malik said. "We are here to create change in Pakistan and rule out corruption."
Meanwhile Election Commission head Sher Afghan denied that anyone was intimidated, threatened or prevented from voting, adding that any formal complaint would be investigated.
source:bbcnews
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