Eastern Eye (UK)

Hold elections or face protests, Khan warns

OUSTED PAKISTAN LEADER PUTS PRESSURE ON RULING COALITION

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PAKISTAN’S ousted prime minister Imran Khan last Thursday (26) warned the government to stage fresh elections or face more mass protests, after leading thousands of supporters to the capital Islamabad in a showdown with his political rivals.

His morning address was the culminatio­n of a chaotic 24 hours which saw the capital blockaded and clashes break out between police and protesters across the country.

The government had attempted to prevent the convoy from reaching the capital by shutting down all entry and exit points around the city, but was forced to allow in protesters by an emergency Supreme Court order.

Since being removed from power through a no-confidence vote last month, cricket star turned politician Khan has heaped pressure on the country’s fragile new coalition rulers by staging rallies, touting a claim he was ousted from office in a “foreign conspiracy”.

“I want to give a message to this imported government to announce elections within six days. Dissolve the assemblies and call an election in June,” he said to a crowd of thousands who later dispersed.

He warned that he would return to the capital with his supporters next week if elections were not scheduled.

“We will not accept his dictation,” prime minister Shehbaz Sharif told parliament last Thursday afternoon. “When elections are to be held, it will be decided by this house.”

“If he thinks he will blackmail us, he is mistaken.”

Thousands of supporters of Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party heeded his call to march to the capital from nearby cities last Wednesday (25). But political analysts said Khan’s attempt to stage a historic sit-in was a failure, with smaller numbers than expected hobbling his bargaining power.

“With around 30,000 people, it was not a good idea to stay in Islamabad and face the powerful police that broke his momentum,” said Qamar Cheema.

Confrontat­ions erupted between police and protesters who attempted to remove roadblocks on key highways to join the convoy. Police repeatedly deployed tear gas to disperse crowds in the capital, as well as in the cities of Lahore, Rawalpindi and Karachi.

The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan said it was “deeply concerned by the highhanded­ness of law enforcemen­t agencies” in disrupting the march. “The state’s overreacti­on has triggered, more than it has prevented, violence on the streets,” it tweeted.

The government had pledged to stop the protesters from entering the capital, calling the rally an attempt to “divide the nation and promote chaos”. But as unrest was breaking out around the country, the Supreme Court granted permission for PTI to stage its rally on the edge of the city.

The court also ordered the government to release PTI supporters detained by police.

More than 1,700 people have been arrested since police began raiding the homes of PTI supporters last Monday night (23), said interior minister Rana Sanaullah, who previously accused protesters of planning to carry weapons.

Khan joined the march in dramatic fashion, arriving in a helicopter that touched down on a motorway clogged with supporters in his power base of Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a province.

While some supporters were left disappoint­ed by the curtailed sit-in, many were prepared to follow their leader. “Whatever decision he takes we just obey it,” said Muhammad Uzair, a 29-year-old clothes shop assistant. “We are ready to come back after six days.”

The internatio­nal sporting hero came to power in 2018, voted in by an electorate weary of the dynastic politics of the country’s two major parties and enjoying the backing of the nation’s powerful military.

Promising to sweep away decades of entrenched corruption and cronyism, he is believed to have fallen out with Pakistan’s generals.

He was brought down by opposition parties in part by his failure to rectify the country’s dire economic situation, including its crippling debt, shrinking foreign currency reserves and soaring inflation.

 ?? ?? FIGHTBACK: Imran Khan
FIGHTBACK: Imran Khan

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