Hindustan Times (East UP)

Prime Minister Khan is ‘100% in trouble’, says key ally

- Letters@hindustant­imes.com

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan’s government is on the verge of losing its majority in Parliament as three key allies are about to quit his cabinet, a top leader from a party supporting the government said, making the backing of the country’s strong army crucial for his survival.

The exit of the alliance partners would shore up support for the opposition in a no-confidence vote slated for later this month in the National Assembly, Chaudhry Parvez Elahi, whose Pakistan Muslim League-Quaid (PML-Q) Party brings the support of five members in the lower house, said in an interview with Hum News TV on Tuesday.

“It’s up to Imran Khan now to personally reach out to his allied parties and convince them to stay in the coalition government,” Elahi said. Otherwise, “he is 100% in trouble”.

He said many within Khan’s party were also unhappy with his performanc­e and may vote against him. Elahi said his PML-Q and Balochista­n Awami Party (BAP) and the Muttahida Qaumi Movement-Pakistan (MQM-P), which have 17 seats between them in the 342-member National Assembly, will soon jointly announce their decision on staying with the government. Khan’s slender seven-seat majority depends on the support of the three smaller allies.

The latest developmen­t comes as opposition groups have asked for a no-confidence vote against the premier, pushing to oust him about 18 months short of his fiveyear term. They blame him for mismanagin­g the economy and foreign policy. He’s appointed four finance ministers and about half a dozen finance secretarie­s since 2018.

Plagued by the second-fastestgro­wing inflation in Asia, Khan recently cut domestic energy prices to pacify public anger, despite agreeing with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund to do the opposite.

Some government ministers have said the vote could take place between March 28-30. However, the speaker of the lower house hasn’t fixed a date yet. Khan has said his majority is intact and that he will “surprise” the opposition parties, who won’t be able to cobble together the 172 votes needed to remove him from power.

Pakistan’s powerful military, which has ruled the country for almost half its history and has been a behind-the-scenes player even during times of democratic­ally elected government­s, could hold the answers to Khan’s political survival.

So far, Khan was said to have the support of the military, which helped him survive previous demands for his resignatio­n by the opposition. However, there are indication­s that might be changing.

“The army is not neutral and rather has withdrawn its support to Imran Khan,” said Shaista Tabassum, a former chairwoman of the internatio­nal relations department at the University of Karachi. That is why the opposition is coming with such an unpreceden­ted force, she added.

Khan and the army have denied any previous behind-thescenes manoeuvres to prop his government.

 ?? REUTERS ?? PM Imran Khan sits in a Chinese J-10 C combat aircraft during the induction ceremony at a Pakistan Air Force base in Kamra.
REUTERS PM Imran Khan sits in a Chinese J-10 C combat aircraft during the induction ceremony at a Pakistan Air Force base in Kamra.

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