The Borneo Post

Jailed Imran rules out alliance with rivals to rule Pakistan

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ISLAMABAD: Jailed ex-prime minister Imran Khan ruled out an alliance with Pakistan’s two largest political parties on Tuesday after his candidates took the most seats in last week’s general election.

Candidates loyal to Khan defied a crackdown blocking them from campaignin­g and forcing them to run as independen­ts, with a combined showing bigger than any party in Thursday’s National Assembly polls.

The upset stopped the armybacked Pakistan Muslim LeagueNawa­z (PML-N) from securing a ruling majority.

Speaking in Adiala Jail – where he has spent much of his time since his arrest in August – Khan accused both the PML-N and second-placed Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) of corruption.

“We will neither sit with the PML-N nor with the PPP,” he told a handful of reporters covering a procedural hearing at the prison outside the capital Islamabad.

There have been widespread allegation­s of vote-rigging and result manipulati­on after authoritie­s switched off the country’s mobile phone network on election day and the count took more than 24 hours.

“We are going to challenge the election rigging in the Supreme Court of Pakistan, and we will consider the alliance later,” said Khan, clutching a string of prayer beads.

The remarks are among the first Khan has made publicly since the poll five days ago returned a boon for his Pakistan Tehreek-eInsaf (PTI) party, despite it being effectivel­y dismantled.

Khan was ousted by a vote of no confidence in 2022 and thereafter waged an unpreceden­ted campaign of defiance against the nation’s military kingmakers.

He has been buried under dozens of court cases, convicted numerous times and barred from standing for office – all he claims orchestrat­ed to prevent his return to power.

PTI’s senior leaders were subject to sweeping arrests and the party barred from appearing on ballot papers in a crackdown analysts agree was planned by the military establishm­ent. — AFP

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