Cricket legend Imran Khan鈥檚 PTI retains seat in Pakistan by-election

Imran Khan, the PTI chairman, touted the victory as a 鈥渄irect vote of confidence鈥� in his party鈥檚 performance governing Khyber Pakhtunkhwa since the 2013 election. (AP)

PESHAWAR, Pakistan: Pakistan鈥檚 opposition Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party, led by former cricket hero Imran Khan, swept to a comfortable by-election victory on the edge of the northwestern city of Peshawar, though its majority was trimmed by new hard-line religious parties.
PTI candidate Arbab Amir Ayub clinched 45,631 votes, about 34.8 percent of the total, on Thursday to ensure PTI kept the parliamentary seat in the province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) that it governs.
The by-election was seen as a litmus test of PTI鈥檚 popularity in KP, where it has focused on police, health and education reforms in contrast to the ruling Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) party betting on road and energy infrastructure projects.
Khan, the PTI chairman, touted the victory as a 鈥渄irect vote of confidence鈥� in his party鈥檚 performance governing KP since the 2013 election, when it won the National Assembly seat, known as Peshawar NA-4, with a majority of about 40 percent.
The next general election is due in mid-2018 but Khan has called for early polls after PML-N leader and Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif was toppled in July by a Supreme Court disqualification over an undeclared source of income.
Analysts say Khan鈥檚 chances of becoming prime minister have been boosted by Sharif鈥檚 ouster, and the sportsman has doubled down on his populist message by saying he will pull the country away from infrastructure spending toward improving schools, hospitals and the lives of the poor.
鈥淢ost of the youngsters like Imran Khan and believe he can steer the country out of crisis and stop corruption,鈥� said Zahid Hussain, a government contractor.
Awami National Party (ANP) candidate Khushdil Khan secured 24,830 votes, or 18.9 percent of the total, to pip PML-N鈥檚 Nasir Khan Musazai, who won 23,169 votes to finish third.
Khushdil Khan鈥檚 showing will hearten the ANP, whose candidates barely campaigned in 2013 as the Pakistani Taliban targeted and killed many of its leaders and activists in KP.
But it was the performance of two new hard-line religious parties that caught the eye of political observers.
Muhammad Shafiq Ameeni, a candidate for the Tehreek-i-Labaik party, won 7.6 percent of the ballot campaigning on a platform of support for Pakistan鈥檚 strict blasphemy laws that are already some of the world鈥檚 harshest.
Labaik supporters have spread their hard-line message, including the notion that those who commit blasphemy against Islam should be killed, through mosques and seminaries.
Syed Moharram Shah, a Labaik activist, said the party was surprised it captured 9,060 votes because it wasn鈥檛 fully prepared for the election.
鈥淭his is our first attempt but look at people鈥檚 response. It鈥檚 very much encouraging,鈥� he said.
AlHajj Liaqat Ali Khan, an independent candidate backed by the Milli Muslim League (MML) party, loyal to Hafiz Saeed, an Islamist under house arrest, obtained 3,557 votes.
Washington accuses Saeed of being the mastermind behind the 2008 attacks in the Indian city of Mumbai that killed 166 people, and has placed a $10 million bounty on his head. Saeed denies the charge.
Last month, candidates backed by Labaik and MML won about 11 percent of the ballot in a by-election for Sharif鈥檚 vacated seat in a by-election in the eastern city of Lahore.