Hindustan Times (Patiala)

ISI accused of asking leaders to join Imran Khan's PTI party

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Last month, a PML-N candidate from Multan in Pakistan’s Punjab, who had accused the Inter-Services Intelligen­ce (ISI) of pressuring him to switch parties, backtracke­d and said it was the agricultur­e department that had picked him up.

After his statement about pressure from the ISI went viral on social media, he told the media he had been probed by the agricultur­e department for two years for alleged misdoings during a past tenure there. His remarks were repeated on Tuesday at a news conference by the military spokesman, Lt Gen Asif Ghafoor.

Now the media jokes that it isn’t the intelligen­ce agencies that are picking up candidates to ensure they change loyalties, but the “agricultur­e department”. Jokes aside, the manner in which the shadowy intelligen­ce set-up has convinced many “electables”, as they are referred to, to change loyalties and join Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party is unpreceden­ted, say observers. A report in The News daily disclosed earlier this year that “scores” of PML-N politician­s, including sitting MPs and legislator­s, had decided to join the PTI. Many of these candidates, who enjoy a good standing in their constituen­cies, were reportedly promised a number of incentives for making the switch.

Ironically, the PML-N lawmaker from Lodhran, Iqbal Shah – who earlier this year scored an unexpected electoral victory over Ali Tareen, the son of top PTI leader Jahangir Tareen – has now decided to join the PTI. “It has been a systematic changing of loyalties which started from south Punjab,” concedes senior PML-N leader and former minister Ahsan Iqbal.

PML-N chief Nawaz Sharif first called those involved in pressuring his party leaders the “khalai maqlooq,” or extra-terrestria­ls. Now he openly accuses the ISI of engineerin­g the outcome of the elections scheduled for July 25. Never before has a senior politician openly accused the ISI of meddling in the electoral process.

Observers say the ISI has been active in encouragin­g some persons to stand for elections, and others to step down. HTC

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