Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai) - Live

Imran shot in the leg at a rally and Pak plunges into chaos

- HT Correspond­ent

NEW DELHI: Pakistan’s former prime minister Imran Khan was injured on Thursday when a gunman opened fire on his vehicle as he led a rally against the government, adding to the political turmoil in the country.

The incident occurred in Wazirabad town of Pakistan’s Punjab province, some 100 km from Lahore, as Khan, 70, was heading towards Islamabad with his supporters to pressure the government of Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif to call early elections. Video footage showed a volley of bullets being apparently fired from an automatic weapon as Khan and other leaders of his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party stood on the roof of the vehicle.

PTI leaders said Khan was hit in the right leg and that he was out of danger. Reports said Khan was lightly wounded and was taken to Shaukat Khanum Hospital in Lahore for treatment. Television footage showed an injured Khan waving to supporters after being shot and then being carried to his bulletproo­f truck. A PTI worker was killed and 13 others, including party leaders Ahmed Chattha and Faisal Javed, were injured in the shooting. A suspect armed with a pistol was arrested at the scene of the shooting after a PTI supporter grappled with him.

“It was a clear assassinat­ion attempt. Khan was hit but he’s stable. There was a lot of bleeding,” PTI leader Fawad Chaudhry told Reuters. Another PTI leader,

Faisal Sultan, told reporters in Lahore that X-rays had revealed shrapnel from bullets in Khan’s leg and a chip in his shin bone.

As Pakistani leaders such as PM Sharif and Pakistan People’s Party leader Asif Ali Zardari condemned the attack, Khan released a statement through PTI leader Asad Umar that blamed Sharif, PML-N leader and federal interior minister Rana Sanaullah and an Inter-Services Intelligen­ce (ISI) official named Maj Gen Faisal Naseer for being behind the attempt to target him.

Umar quoted Khan as saying that he had made the accusation on the basis of informatio­n he had received. He did not give details. Khan has targeted two army officials in several of his recent public speeches – Naseer, who heads ISI’s C directorat­e that is responsibl­e for internal security, and Brig Faheem Raza, the sector commander for Islamabad.

Khan benefited from the military’s patronage during the 2018 general election, when he swept to power. But his relationsh­ip with the powerful Pakistan Army soured after he was removed in a vote of no-confidence in April. The military launched an onslaught against Khan last month, taking the unpreceden­ted step of fielding ISI chief Lt Gen Nadeem Anjum for a news conference at which the former PM was accused of maligning the army leadership and creating divisions within the polity and the people. Anjum said Khan had offered an “indefinite extension” to Pakistan Army chief Gen Qamar Bajwa in March, shortly before the confidence vote. He also accused Khan of secretly meeting the army leadership to

 ?? REUTERS ?? A videograb of Khan getting assistance after the attack.
REUTERS A videograb of Khan getting assistance after the attack.

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