Previous Election: | 2001 Azad Kashmiri general election |
Previous Year: | 2001 |
Election Date: | 11 July 2006 |
Next Election: | 2011 Azad Kashmiri general election |
Next Year: | 2011 |
Election Name: | 2006 Azad Kashmir general election |
Type: | Parliamentary |
Ongoing: | No |
Party1: | All Jammu and Kashmir Muslim Conference |
Seats1: | 27 |
Party2: | Pakistan People's Party |
Seats2: | 8 |
Party3: | PML |
Seats3: | 4 |
Party4: | Muttahida Qaumi Movement – London |
Seats4: | 2 |
Party5: | Independent |
Seats5: | 6 |
Before Election: | Sardar Sikandar Hayat Khan |
After Election: | Attique Ahmed Khan |
Before Party: | All Jammu and Kashmir Muslim Conference |
After Party: | All Jammu and Kashmir Muslim Conference |
Prime Minister | |
Seats For Election: | 41 of the 49 seats in the Azad Kashmir Legislative Assembly |
Majority Seats: | 25 |
Leader1: | Attique Ahmed Khan |
Colour3: | B5E61D |
Leader4: | Tahir Khokhar |
Leader3: | Sultan Mehmood Chaudhry |
Leader5: | N/A |
Leader2: | Sahibzada Muhammad Ishaq Zaffar |
Country: | Azad Kashmir |
Leaders Seat1: | Bagh-I |
Leaders Seat2: | Muzaffarabad-V |
Leaders Seat3: | Mirpur-III |
Leaders Seat4: | Jammu and Others-I |
General elections were held in Azad Kashmir on 11 July 2006 to elect the members of eighth assembly of Azad Kashmir. Sardar Attique Ahmed Khan and Raja Zulqarnain Khan were elected as Prime Minister and President of Azad Kashmir, respectively.[1]
The All Jammu and Kashmir Muslim Conference (AJKMC) won twenty general seats, the Pakistan People's Party seven, the People's Muslim League (PML) four the Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) two, and the Jammu Kashmir Peoples Party (JKPP) one. Six independents also won seats, although three of them joined the AJKMC after the election. LA-33 Jammu and Others-IV had its election postponed by four days, which saw another AJKMC victory. Following the elections, the AJKMC managed to win four seats reserved for women and one reserved seat each for ulema, technocrats, and overseas. On the other hand, the PPP only won one reserved seat for women.[2] [3] [4]
Therefore, the AJKMC managed to have thirty-one members in the Assembly, the PPP eight, the PML four, independents three, the MQM two, and the JKPP one.[5]
The AJKMC formed the next government in Azad Kashmir, easily electing its leader, Attique Ahmed Khan, as the next Prime Minister. Khan had received 35 votes and defeated Sahibzada Muhammad Ishaq Zaffar of the PPP, who received only eight votes. The AJKMC was also able to elect Shah Ghulam Qadir and Sardar Farooq Tahir as Speaker and Deputy Speaker of the Assembly, respectively.[6] [7]
Candidates from the Jammu Kashmir Liberation Front and other pro-independence groups were not allowed to run; local law prohibits persons expressing views counter to "the ideology of Pakistan, the ideology of the State’s accession to Pakistan or the sovereignty, integrity of Pakistan" from running for office. Opposition groups saw the vote as rigged in favour of the Pakistani federal government.[8] [2]