Dr Arif Alvi is all smiles as he arrives at Parliament House for the election. —AFP
• Elected country’s 13th president amid opposition disarray
• Receives 44 more electoral votes than collective haul of Aitzaz, Fazl
• Loses in home province
ISLAMABAD: In an electoral exercise without much suspense, Dr Arif Alvi of the Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) was elected 13th president of Pakistan on Tuesday for a five-year term defeating two opponents from a divided opposition.
He will replace President Mamnoon Hussain who is set to complete his term on Sept 9.
Other contestants in the run were the joint opposition’s candidate Maulana Fazlur Rahman and the Pakistan Peoples Party’s Barrister Aitzaz Ahsan.
According to unofficial results announced by the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP), Arif Alvi secured 353 electoral votes — 44 more than his two rivals could collectively obtain. Maulana Fazl and Mr Ahsan clinched 185 and 124 electoral votes, respectively.
Interestingly, Dr Alvi bagged 212 votes from the Senate and the National Assembly and his rivals also collectively secured exactly the same number of votes from the two houses of parliament. Fazlur Rahman and Aitzaz Ahsan got 131 and 81 votes from parliament, respectively. In all 430 votes were polled by members of parliament, six of which were rejected.
Dr Alvi secured more votes than his opponents in all legislatures, except the provincial assembly of Sindh — the province he belongs to and from where he had contested and won two consecutive elections of the National Assembly.
While Fazlur Rahman and Aitzaz Ahsan could not vote for themselves for not being members of parliament, Dr Alvi cast his vote in the National Assembly. Mr Ahsan watched the election proceedings from the Speaker’s Gallery but Fazlur Rahman was conspicuous by his absence.
The PPP leader secured six more votes than his party’s strength in parliament but Fazlur Rahman clinched 12 votes less than the strength of the joint opposition in parliament, minus the PPP.
In his interaction with the media, Dr Arif Alvi said he would not like to be an “inactive and silent president.”
“The party [PTI] has not sent me for hibernation”, he claimed.
In an echo of the PPP slogan of ‘roti, kapra aur makan’ he hoped that the “fortunes of the poor will take a turn for the better”, and that they would get “food, shelter and clothing” during his term.
“I am grateful to God that the PTI-nominated candidate has been successful in the presidential race today,” Mr Alvi said in his victory speech. “I am also thankful to Imran Khan for nominating me for such a big responsibility.”