Khan: Pakistan’s embattled Imran Khan faces blackout on local media – Times of India

ISLAMABAD: Coverage of Pakistan’s former Prime Minister Imran Khan has disappeared from all mainstream news channels in the country after the media regulator asked networks to block out people involved in rioting last month, a Reuters survey showed on Monday.
A directive, seen by Reuters, was put out by the regulator last week referring to violent protests in Pakistan last month following Khan’s brief arrest that saw military installations ransacked, allegedly by the former prime minister’s supporters.
The Pakistan Electronic Media Regulatory Authority (PEMRA) asked television licensees to ensure that “hate mongers, rioters, their facilitators and perpetrators” are “completely screened out from media”. It did not refer directly to Khan.
However, coverage of the former prime minister – Pakistan’s most popular leader according to polls – has disappeared to the extent that his name and image are not being aired. His mention has also disappeared from news websites.
PEMRA officials did not respond to multiple requests for comment and queries on whether the directives pertained to Khan, and if the directive was meant to be an all-encompassing ban.
Khan has long been the most televised politician in Pakistan, with his speeches and gatherings getting wall-to-wall coverage and widespread viewership.
The ban comes amidst a wider crackdown on Khan and his party that has seen dozens of his party members and thousands of his supporters arrested, which, he says, is being done by the country’s powerful military.
The military has not responded to a request for comment on that allegation by Khan. It has previously denied orchestrating his removal his removal from power in a parliamentary vote last year.
Khan himself was arrested on charges of graft but released two days later after courts deemed the manner of his detention illegal. He remains out on bail, but faces dozens of cases.
In an interview, Khan said that the incidents of violence was used as a “pretext” to for a “blanket ban” on him and his party.
“We cannot be mentioned on television,” said Khan, who now regularly speaks through his party’s YouTube channel.
Senior officials of four major news channels did not respond to request for comment.
Even ARY News, considered a pro-Khan channel by the former prime minister’s political opponents, had no mention of Khan on Monday, despite his standoff with the military dominating headlines globally for weeks.
“The reports of blocking all news related to Imran Khan is the latest in a series of disturbing steps that authorities have taken to crack down on the opposition,” Dinushika Dissanayake, Deputy Director, South Asia, at Amnesty International, said in a statement.




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Pak Ex-PM Imran Khan’s Pre-Arrest Bail In 3 Cases Extended Till June 13

Imran Khan said over 25 workers of his party were killed in the violence. (File)

Lahore:

Pakistan’s former prime minister Imran Khan on Friday appeared before an anti-terrorism court in Lahore and secured an extension to his pre-arrest bail till June 13 in three cases including an attack on a top military commander’s residence in Lahore, a court official said.

Khan, 70, who appeared before the ATC Lahore amid high security, reiterated that he faces “serious threats” to his life.

The Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party chairman also appeared before the Lahore High Court to seek an extension to his bail in the murder case of PTI worker Zille Shah. The Lahore High Court has extended his bail in the case till June 6.

“In the ATC, Judge Ijaz Ahmad Buttar questioned why he (Khan) is not joining the investigation in the case related to the attack on Lahore Corps Commander House known as Jinnah House. 

Khan told him that he was facing “serious threats to his life,” the court official told PTI after the hearing.

“He (Khan) said he had requested the investigators to allow him to join the probe through a video link which was declined. The judge however directed him to join the investigation and extended his bail till Jun 13,” the official said.

Violence erupted across Pakistan on May 9 when cricketer-turned-politician Khan was arrested by the National Accountability Board (NAB) from the premises of Islamabad High Court in a corruption case. Khan was released on bail two days later.

Over 20 military installations and government buildings including military headquarters in Rawalpindi were damaged during the May 9 mayhem that has been termed as the “Black Day” in the history of Pakistan.

Over 100 vehicles of police and other security agencies were also set on fire during the violence that left more than 10 persons dead.

Khan, however, said over 25 PTI workers were killed in the violence and that law enforcement agencies arrested over 10,000 PTI workers across Pakistan. As many as 4,000 of them are from Punjab. 

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)


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Imran Khan Will Be Tried In Military Court, Says Pakistan’s Interior Minister

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Interior Minister Rana Sanaullah on Tuesday said that Imran Khan will be tried in a military court as the former prime minister was the “architect” of the May 9 incidents in which military and state installations were attacked by his party workers following his arrest in a corruption case. Appearing on a Dawn News show, Sanaullah also accused the 70-year-old chief of the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party of personally carrying out the planning of the attacks on military installations before his arrest on the day.

There was evidence to prove the claim as well, the minister added. When asked if Khan would be tried in the military court, he said: “Absolutely, why shouldn’t it? The programme that he made to target the military installations and then had it executed, in my understanding it absolutely is a case of a military court.” The minister accused Khan of personally orchestrating the May 9 riots.

“His supporters chanted a slogan that ‘Imran Khan is our red line’, and the planning and preparation were done on Imran Khan’s initiative and instigation. He carried it all out. He is the architect of all this discord,” he said. “(The evidence) is documented, it is in tweets and his messages,” he added.

When asked how Khan was able to communicate with his party leaders even from jail, the minister replied: “All this (planning) was decided before he went (to jail) that ?who will do what and where. And when he is arrested, what would be the strategy and duties’. All of this was decided.” The minister’s remarks come a day after Defence Minister Khawaja Asif said that there was no decision yet on Khan’s trial under the stringent Army Act. He, however, said that he could not ‘rule out’ such a possibility.

“I don’t rule out the possibility that he was the planner and knew everything (about May 9),” Asif said. Khan has denied his involvement in the violence, saying he was in the jail when the mayhem took place. He has that the establishment plans to keep him in jail for 10 years in a sedition case. On May 9, violent protests erupted after the arrest of Khan by paramilitary Rangers in Islamabad. His party workers vandalised over 20 military installations and government buildings, including the Lahore Corps Commander House, Mianwali airbase and the ISI building in Faisalabad. The Army headquarters (GHQ) in Rawalpindi was also attacked by the mob for the first time. Khan was later released on bail.

The violence elicited a strong reaction from the government and military with vows of taking action against the culprits, leading to an ongoing crackdown against those involved. Law enforcement agencies have arrested over 10,000 workers of Khan’s Pakistan party across Pakistan, 4,000 of them from Punjab.

Police put the death toll in violent clashes to 10 while Khan’s party claims 40 of its workers lost their lives in the firing by security personnel. The Punjab Police had previously claimed, citing a geo-fencing report, that Khan and his close aides allegedly coordinated efforts to storm the residence of the Lahore Corps Commander and other buildings.

Punjab Inspector General of Police Dr Usman Anwar, when contacted by Dawn, had confirmed the geo-fencing record and the alleged use of Khan’s residence in Lahore for planning the attack on the Jinnah House. A senior officer, requesting anonymity, had told the newspaper that many important revelations had come from the analysis of the geo-fencing record: it was detected that 154 calls were allegedly made by Khan to party leaders and rioters to provoke them to attack. He had said the PTI chairman was the ‘prime suspect’ who allegedly planned the attack on the house of the corps commander.

The officer had said call records showed all phone calls were made on May 8 and May 9 ‘the day of Khan’s arrest’ to prepare workers to attack the building. On Friday, Sanaullah said that 33 suspects, 19 in Punjab and 14 in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, were handed over to the military. On Monday, an anti-terrorism court in Rawalpindi directed the superintendent of the Adiala Jail to hand over eight suspects to the military for trial.




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पाकिस्तान के पूर्व पीएम इमरान खान का खेल हो गया खत्म, मरियम नवाज ने किया दावा

Image Source : PTI
इमरान खान, पूर्व पीएम पाकिस्तान

पाकिस्तान मुस्लिम लीग नवाज (पीएमएल-एन) की वरिष्ठ उपाध्यक्ष मरियम नवाज ने देश के पूर्व प्रधानमंत्री इमरान खान पर टिप्पणी करते कहा कि उनकी पार्टी के वरिष्ठ सदस्यों के इस्तीफा देने के बाद उनका ‘‘खेल खत्म हो गया है।’’ मरियम ने पंजाब प्रांत में एक सम्मेलन को संबोधित करते हुए शुक्रवार को ये टिप्पणियां कीं। उन्होंने इस दौरान नौ मई को हुई घटनाओं पर भी बात की जब पाकिस्तान तहरीक-ए-इंसाफ (पीटीआई) प्रमुख खान को गिरफ्तार किया गया था, जिससे देशभर में हिंसक प्रदर्शन हुए थे।

पीएमएल-एन सुप्रीमो और पाकिस्तान के पूर्व प्रधानमंत्री नवाज शरीफ की बेटी मरियम ने पीटीआई अध्यक्ष खान से कहा कि उनकी पार्टी के वरिष्ठ सदस्यों के छोड़कर चले जाने के बाद ‘‘खेल खत्म हो गया है।’’ देश में नौ मई को हुई हिंसा के बाद से पीटीआई के अब तक 70 से अधिक वकीलों और नेताओं ने पार्टी छोड़ दी है। पार्टी के महासचिव असद उमर, पूर्व सूचना मंत्री फवाद चौधरी और पूर्व मानवाधिकारी मंत्री शिरीन मजारी समेत पीटीआई के शीर्ष नेताओं ने इस्तीफा दे दिया है।

मरियम ने कहा पीटीआइ से इस्तीफा देने वालों की लगी कतार

बड़ी संख्या में नेताओं के पार्टी छोड़ने पर ‘पीटीआई’ पर निशाना साधते हुए मरियम ने कहा कि पार्टी छोड़ने वालों की कतार लग गयी है। पीटीआई नेताओं के पार्टी छोड़ने का सिलसिला तब शुरू हुआ जब सुरक्षा बलों ने नागरिक तथा सैन्य प्रतिष्ठानों पर हमलों के बाद पार्टी के खिलाफ कार्रवाई शुरू की। मरियम ने पूर्व प्रधानमंत्री खान की निंदा करते हुए कहा, ‘‘जब नेता खुद ही गीदड़ है तो लोग कैसे साथ रहेंगे? आपके लोग खुलासा कर रहे हैं कि इमरान खान (70) नौ मई की घटनाओं के मास्टमाइंड हैं।’’ पीएमएल-एन नेता ने कहा कि खान नौ मई के ‘‘आतंकवाद’’ के मास्टरमाइंड थे लेकिन आतंकवाद रोधी अदालत का सामना उनके कार्यकर्ता कर रहे हैं। उन्होंने कहा कि खान अपनी पत्नी बुशरा बीबी को चादरों से ढककर अदालत ले गए लेकिन उन्होंने अन्य महिलाओं का मोहरों के रूप में इस्तेमाल किया। मरियम ने कहा कि नौ मई की घटना ‘‘पाकिस्तान सेना पर हमला’’ थी और पूर्व प्रधानमंत्री की उनके ‘‘सहायक’’ मदद कर रहे थे।

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“Game Over”: Nawaz Sharif’s Daughter Maryam Nawaz Mocks Imran Khan

“How will the people stand when the leader himself is a jackal?” Maryam Nawaz said.

Islamabad:

Nawaz Sharif’s daughter and Pakistan Muslim League Nawaz (PML-N) Senior Vice President Maryam Nawaz mocked Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf chairman Imran Khan, saying that the “game is over”, following an exodus of his party’s senior members, Pakistan-based Geo News reported.

Geo News is a Pakistani news channel.

Maryam Nawaz made the speech in Pakistan’s Vehari while addressing the PML-N’s youth convention. During her address, she talked about the incidents on May 9, the day on which Imran Khan was arrested, triggering violent protests across Pakistan.

Maryam Nawaz, while mocking Imran Khan’s party over its leaders’ mass departure, said that there were ques of those quitting the party.

The Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf leaders’ exodus started when the security forces launched a crackdown against the party following the attacks on the civil and military institutions, including the General Headquarters in Rawalpindi and the Lahore Corps Commander’s House (Jinnah House), according to Geo News.

Over 70 lawyers and leaders from the party have parted ways with the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf so for following the May 9 mayhem.

“How will the people stand when the leader himself is a jackal?” she said, while ridiculing former Prime Minister Imran Khan, who was removed from office via a vote of no confidence in April last year.

“Your people are revealing that Imran Khan is the mastermind of May 9 [incidents]” she said, as per Geo News.

The PML-N senior vice president said that Imran Khan was the mastermind of the May 9 “terrorism” but his workers are facing anti-terrorism court.

Meanwhile, Imran Khan appealed for immediate talks with state officials. This comes as pressure mounts on him amid a crackdown on his top aides and supporters that saw thousands arrested as well as many leaving his party, Pakistan-based The Express Tribune newspaper reported.
 


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Imran Khan “Increasingly Besieged, Isolated” As Pakistan Army Cracks Down

Khan’s ability to connect with the outside world and marshal support is already being eroded.

Holed up at his fortified home in Lahore’s upmarket Zaman Park, Imran Khan is looking increasingly besieged and isolated as Pakistan’s military instigates a sweeping crackdown against the former prime minister’s political party.

Following unprecedented attacks against military-owned properties and widespread protests after Khan was briefly jailed earlier this month, more than 10,000 people linked to Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf, or Movement for Justice, have been arrested in police raids. Several prominent leaders are now in jail and more than two dozen PTI stalwarts have quit the party this week.

Publicly the army and the government say they are holding accountable anyone who attacked state-owned property. Behind the scenes, however, there’s a recognition that Khan’s popularity is unmatched and his party must be cut down to size ahead of elections due in October at the latest, according to two people familiar with the military’s thinking.

Khan now risks meeting a similar fate as previous prime ministers who have been jailed, exiled or executed following power struggles with Pakistan’s generals. Although army support was widely credited in bringing Khan to office in the last national election in 2018, his current predicament stems from his attempts to mess with military hierarchy – a red line for Pakistan’s most powerful institution, which has directly controlled the nuclear-armed nation for much of its post-independence history.

For now, “this is the end of the road for Imran Khan,” said Ayesha Siddiqa, a senior fellow at King’s College London and expert on Pakistan’s military. “The question is will they be able to take away his support base?”

Khan’s ability to connect with the outside world and marshal support is already being eroded. On Wednesday, the internet at his Lahore residence was abruptly cut off before a scheduled call with British lawmakers concerned about Pakistan’s deteriorating political, economic and security situation. Police have also compounded most of his armored cars, limiting his movements, Zulfi Bukhari, a close aide to Khan, told Bloomberg News.

On Friday, a news report said Khan and his wife had been placed on a no-fly list and were barred from leaving the country. The former premier survived an assassination attempt late last year.

Pakistan’s military didn’t respond to a request for comment.

Since his ousting as prime minister last year following a parliamentary no-confidence vote, Khan has campaigned relentlessly for fresh elections. He has blasted the unwieldy coalition headed by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif – who is seen as more amenable to the army even though his brother was once ousted in a coup – as a corrupt force of self-serving dynastic parties.

Khan’s charismatic, everyman quality, past cricketing victories and more recent embrace of pious religion – despite his elite upbringing and earlier playboy lifestyle – has seen his popularity soar across Pakistani society, including many of the army’s rank-and-file. An opinion poll published by Gallup earlier this year found that Khan’s approval rating jumped to 61% in February from 36% in January last year, while Sharif’s fell to 32% from 51% in that time.

That poses a major dilemma for the military brass. Khan would win an election by a landslide with no “credible alternative” for the army to back, according to Tim Willasey-Wilsey, a senior associate fellow at the Royal United Services Institute for Defence and Security Studies in London.

With Pakistan’s more than 240 million people grappling with record inflation and the country on the verge of default thanks to stalled bailout talks with the International Monetary Fund, the military is unlikely to boot out the elected government and take direct control. Pakistan’s last coup leader, General Pervez Musharraf, stepped down as a deeply unpopular and diminished figure fifteen years ago.

Pakistan’s rupee slid to a record-low 299 per dollar this month while dollar bonds are trading at distressed levels. The currency has lost about 20% this year, among the worst performers in the world.

“The army’s problem is that every measure against Imran will add to his popularity,” said Willasey-Wilsey. “It could also lead to divisions amongst the Corps Commanders who will be anxious about alienating the army from the people – the army will doubtless contemplate intervention options short of a coup, including delaying elections.”

Khan’s relationship with the military wasn’t always so fractious. After coming to power he openly conceded that the forces, which enjoy an over-sized defense budget and wide-ranging business interests across Pakistan, had a role to play in governing the country. But that relationship began unraveling in 2021 as Khan’s anti-American rhetoric pushed the country further away from the US as the economy deteriorated, drawing Islamabad closer to Russia and China.

Eventually, it was Khan’s attempt to control military promotions that escalated tensions. He publicly opposed then Chief of Army Staff Qamar Javed Bajwa’s choice for the head of Pakistan’s feared spy agency, voicing support for one of his own allies to stay in the role. Bajwa eventually got his way, but the incident sowed the seeds for Khan’s ouster.

Fraught Relations

“He miscalculated by seeking once again to intervene and interfere in the business of military appointments – of course that, as in the past, is the one area that the military guards jealously as its prerogative,” said Farzana Shaikh, an associate fellow at London’s Chatham House research institute. “It’s a familiar routine, we’ve been here before. Other parties have also splintered and fragmented under pressure from the military establishment.”

His relationship with Bajwa’s successor, General Asim Munir, was also fraught. As prime minister, Khan had removed Munir from the role of intelligence chief. Khan more recently inflamed matters by personally blaming the recent turmoil on Munir’s desire for power, and on Monday he likened the situation in Pakistan to Adolf Hitler’s rise in the 1930s.

Hours after the government said this week it was considering a ban on his PTI over the attacks on military offices and buildings, Khan struck a more conciliatory tone. He offered to hold talks with Sharif’s administration and the military, saying he is ready to form a committee to talk with “anyone who is in power today.”

“What’s important is there to be a political dialog between everybody,” said Khan’s aide Bukhari. “Then also at some stage, the two most powerful people in the country, the chief of army staff and Imran Khan, have to sit down and discuss a way forward.”

Any such negotiation for Khan will likely now come from a position of relative weakness. Public sympathy for the military has also risen since the attacks on army property and officer’s homes.

In the port city of Karachi, Pakistan’s business hub, massive banners and posters – some covering the entire length of multistory buildings – declare “Long Live Pakistan” and “Long Live the Soldier.” Others feature Munir flanked by his officers. Trade associations have conducted rallies in support of the armed forces, while television and film stars have taken to social media to declare their love and support for the military.

Sixteen people accused of taking part in the violence that targeted army buildings have been handed over to military courts, according to a document shared by the PTI.

The tactics against Khan are “a page out of the military’s usual playbook” in dealing with dissenting politicians and parties, according to Madiha Afzal, a fellow at the Brookings Institution in Washington.

“If this is history repeating itself with the military’s assertiveness,” she said, “it’s not looking good for Imran Khan, his party, or for Pakistan’s democracy.”
 

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)


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Imran Khan faces ‘end of the road’ as Pakistan army cracks down – Times of India


ISLAMABAD: Holed up at his fortified home in Lahore’s upmarket Zaman Park, Imran Khan is looking increasingly besieged and isolated as Pakistan’s military instigates a sweeping crackdown against the former prime minister’s political party.
Following unprecedented attacks against military-owned properties and widespread protests after Khan was briefly jailed earlier this month, more than 10,000 people linked to Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek—e-Insaf, or Movement for Justice, have been arrested in police raids. Several prominent leaders are now in jail and more than two dozen PTI stalwarts have quit the party this week.
Publicly the army and the government say they are holding accountable anyone who attacked state-owned property. Behind the scenes, however, there’s a recognition that Khan’s popularity is unmatched and his party must be cut down to size ahead of elections due in October at the latest, according to two people familiar with the military’s thinking.
Khan now risks meeting a similar fate as previous prime ministers who have been jailed, exiled or executed following power struggles with Pakistan’s generals. Although army support was widely credited in bringing Khan to office in the last national election in 2018, his current predicament stems from his attempts to mess with military hierarchy — a red line for Pakistan’s most powerful institution, which has directly controlled the nuclear-armed nation for much of its post-independence history.
For now, “this is the end of the road for Imran Khan,” said Ayesha Siddiqa, a senior fellow at King’s College London and expert on Pakistan’s military. “The question is will they be able to take away his support base?”
Khan’s ability to connect with the outside world and marshal support is already being eroded. On Wednesday, the internet at his Lahore residence was abruptly cut off before a scheduled call with British lawmakers concerned about Pakistan’s deteriorating political, economic and security situation. Police have also compounded most of his armored cars, limiting his movements, Zulfi Bukhari, a close aide to Khan, told Bloomberg News.
On Friday, a news report said Khan and his wife had been placed on a no-fly list and were barred from leaving the country. The former premier survived an assassination attempt late last year.
Pakistan’s military didn’t respond to a request for comment.
Since his ousting as prime minister last year following a parliamentary no-confidence vote, Khan has campaigned relentlessly for fresh elections. He has blasted the unwieldy coalition headed by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif — who is seen as more amenable to the army even though his brother was once ousted in a coup — as a corrupt force of self-serving dynastic parties.
Khan’s charismatic, everyman quality, past cricketing victories and more recent embrace of pious religion — despite his elite upbringing and earlier playboy lifestyle — has seen his popularity soar across Pakistani society, including many of the army’s rank-and-file. An opinion poll published by Gallup earlier this year found that Khan’s approval rating jumped to 61% in February from 36% in January last year, while Sharif’s fell to 32% from 51% in that time.
That poses a major dilemma for the military brass. Khan would win an election by a landslide with no “credible alternative” for the army to back, according to Tim Willasey-Wilsey, a senior associate fellow at the Royal United Services Institute for Defence and Security Studies in London.
With Pakistan’s more than 240 million people grappling with record inflation and the country on the verge of default thanks to stalled bailout talks with the International Monetary Fund, the military is unlikely to boot out the elected government and take direct control. Pakistan’s last coup leader, General Pervez Musharraf, stepped down as a deeply unpopular and diminished figure fifteen years ago.
Pakistan’s rupee slid to a record-low 299 per dollar this month while dollar bonds are trading at distressed levels. The currency has lost about 20% this year, among the worst performers in the world.
“The army’s problem is that every measure against Imran will add to his popularity,” said Willasey-Wilsey. “It could also lead to divisions amongst the Corps Commanders who will be anxious about alienating the army from the people — the army will doubtless contemplate intervention options short of a coup, including delaying elections.”
Khan’s relationship with the military wasn’t always so fractious. After coming to power he openly conceded that the forces, which enjoy an over-sized defense budget and wide-ranging business interests across Pakistan, had a role to play in governing the country. But that relationship began unraveling in 2021 as Khan’s anti-American rhetoric pushed the country further away from the US as the economy deteriorated, drawing Islamabad closer to Russia and China.
Eventually it was Khan’s attempt to control military promotions that escalated tensions. He publicly opposed then Chief of Army Staff Qamar Javed Bajwa’s choice for the head of Pakistan’s feared spy agency, voicing support for one of his own allies to stay in the role. Bajwa eventually got his way, but the incident sowed the seeds for Khan’s ouster.
Fraught relations
“He miscalculated by seeking once again to intervene and interfere in the business of military appointments — of course that, as in the past, is the one area that the military guards jealously as its prerogative,” said Farzana Shaikh, an associate fellow at London’s Chatham House research institute. “It’s a familiar routine, we’ve been here before. Other parties have also splintered and fragmented under pressure from the military establishment.”
His relationship with Bajwa’s successor, General Asim Munir, was also fraught. As prime minister, Khan had removed Munir from the role of intelligence chief. Khan more recently inflamed matters by personally blaming the recent turmoil on Munir’s desire for power, and on Monday he likened the situation in Pakistan to Adolf Hitler’s rise in the 1930s.
Hours after the government said this week it was considering a ban on his PTI over the attacks on military offices and buildings, Khan struck a more conciliatory tone. He offered to hold talks with Sharif’s administration and the military, saying he is ready to form a committee to talk with “anyone who is in power today.”
“What’s important is there to be a political dialog between everybody,” said Khan’s aide Bukhari. “Then also at some stage, the two most powerful people in the country, the chief of army staff and Imran Khan, have to sit down and discuss a way forward.”
Any such negotiation for Khan will likely now come from a position of relative weakness. Public sympathy for the military has also risen since the attacks on army property and officer’s homes.
In the port city of Karachi, Pakistan’s business hub, massive banners and posters — some covering the entire length of multistory buildings — declare “Long Live Pakistan” and “Long Live the Soldier.” Others feature Munir flanked by his officers. Trade associations have conducted rallies in support of the armed forces, while television and film stars have taken to social media to declare their love and support for the military.
Sixteen people accused of taking part in the violence that targeted army buildings have been handed over to military courts, according to a document shared by the PTI.
The tactics against Khan are “a page out of the military’s usual playbook” in dealing with dissenting politicians and parties, according to Madiha Afzal, a fellow at the Brookings Institution in Washington.
“If this is history repeating itself with the military’s assertiveness,” she said, “it’s not looking good for Imran Khan, his party, or for Pakistan’s democracy.”




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Imran Khan Says Party Leaders Being Forced To Quit Amid Standoff With Army

The standoff between Imran Khan’s party and Pak army intensified following May 9 violence in the country.

Islamabad:

Former Pakistan prime minister Imran Khan said Wednesday that senior leaders were being pressured into resigning from his party amid a crackdown, as a former cabinet minister became the latest to quit.

Rights monitors said authorities have detained thousands of supporters of Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party since days of street violence erupted over his brief arrest earlier this month.

Party spokesman Fawad Chaudhry, who served as information minister in Khan’s government, quit the party while general secretary Asad Umar, the former finance minister, said he would step down from his position but remain with PTI.

It came after senior vice-president Shireen Mazari parted ways with Khan on Tuesday.

All three made their announcements after being released from custody on allegations of instigating street violence after Khan’s arrest.

“This is a crackdown that I have never seen in the history of Pakistan before,” Khan said in a video address on Wednesday night.

If you say that you are part of PTI, then you will face oppression and violence, you will be locked up,” he said.

“If you say the magic words, ‘We are no longer in PTI’, then you will be released.”

Khan claimed the suppression was being targeted at grassroots supporters, as well as officials.

“They have put everyone in jail, I don’t even know who to contact anymore,” he said from his home in the eastern city of Lahore.

Chaudhry announced his resignation on Twitter, denouncing the civil unrest and saying he would “take a break from politics”.  

Umar meanwhile held a press conference, saying he had not been pressured into the decision to step down as general secretary.

Amnesty International on Tuesday said “a pall of fear hangs over Khan’s supporters following the arbitrary arrests of many opposition leaders”.

“Authorities must stop clamping down on the political opposition” they said in a joint statement with other organisations, accusing the government of using “vague anti-terrorism laws” to justify detentions.

Since he was ousted from office, 70-year-old Khan has waged an unprecedented campaign of defiance against the powerful military establishment, long regarded as Pakistan’s powerbrokers.

He accuses the top brass of orchestrating his downfall and even plotting a November assassination attempt in which he was shot in the leg, allegations that the army denies.

His arrest on graft charges at the Islamabad High Court came just hours after he repeated the claim and was seen by his party as a bid to quash support ahead of elections due no later than October.

People rampaged through cities, setting fire to buildings, blocking roads and clashing with police outside military installations during unrest in which nine people were killed.

Khan walked free from three days of custody after the Supreme Court declared the arrest illegal.

The military has denied claims by Khan that “agencies” planned the violence to smear his party.

Meanwhile Islamabad has pledged to try in military courts those accused of violence against army installations.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)


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Former Pakistan Minister Qureshi Arrested Again After Being Released From Prison

ISLAMABAD: Shah Mahmood Qureshi, the former foreign minister and vice-chairman of Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party was arrested again on Tuesday, moments after being released from a prison in Rawalpindi on the orders of a top court. Qureshi, 66, served as Pakistan’s Foreign Affairs Minister from 2018 to 2022 under Khan’s regime. The Islamabad High Court on Tuesday ordered Qureshi’s release after he submitted an undertaking affirming that he would abstain from creating agitation and inciting workers, according to Geo TV.

However, moments after his release from Rawalpindi’s Adiala Jail, Punjab Police re-arrested the former minister, the report said. Qureshi was among the top Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) leaders arrested after violent protests erupted following Khan’s arrest on May 9. Khan’s supporters vandalised a dozen military installations, including the Lahore Corps Commander house, Mianwali airbase, the ISI building in Faisalabad and also torched sensitive defence installations.

The Army headquarters (GHQ) in Rawalpindi was also attacked by the mob for the first time. Like Qureshi, Khan’s close aide and former minister for human rights Shireen Mazari was also re-arrested on Monday. Mazari quit the party and announced her retirement from active politics on Tuesday.

She made the announcement after she was released following her arrest for the fourth time since May 12 when she was picked from her residence by police and sent to jail.

Mazari has been a vocal critic of Pakistan’s military and Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s government. On Tuesday, Fayyazul Hassan Chohan, another key leader in Khan’s party, said at a news conference that he is quitting the party over what he termed was Khan’s ‘politics of confrontation with the state and the military.’

Meanwhile, Khan has termed his party leaders’ exodus as “forced divorce,” after Mazari’s announcement. “We had all heard about forced marriages in Pakistan but for PTI a new phenomenon has emerged, forced divorces,” Khan tweeted. “I commend and salute all the senior members who are resisting the extreme pressure to quit the party,” Khan said in another tweet.

Khan, 70, who is facing more than 100 cases ranging from corruption to terrorism, said he sympathises will everyone who were pressurised to leave the party. An anti-terrorism court in Pakistan granted Khan bail till June 8 in eight cases related to violence that erupted at the Judicial Complex here in March.

The cases were registered in different police stations of Islamabad against the former prime minister after clashes erupted between police and his supporters when the PTI party chief appeared before a court in the Judicial Complex on March 18. The clashes erupted when Khan attended a much-awaited hearing in the Toshakhana corruption case.

The Toshakhana is a department under the administrative control of the Cabinet Division and stores precious gifts given to rulers, parliamentarians, bureaucrats, and officials by heads of other governments and states and foreign dignitaries. Khan, the cricketer-turned-politician, was ousted from power in April last year after losing a no-confidence vote in his leadership, which he alleged was part of a US-led conspiracy targeting him because of his independent foreign policy decisions on Russia, China and Afghanistan.




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