The Manila Times

Recuperate­d Khan returns to fight

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RAWALPINDI, Pakistan: Pakistan’s former prime minister Imran Khan told tens of thousands of supporters Saturday he would fight with his “last drop of blood” in a first public address since being shot in an assassinat­ion attempt earlier this month.

The shooting was the latest twist in months of political turmoil that began in April when Khan was ousted by a vote of no confidence in parliament.

Saturday’s rally was the climax of a so-called long march by Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party to press the government to call a snap election before parliament’s term expires in October next year.

“I have seen death from up close,” said Khan, who hobbled to the stage with a walking frame to speak to supporters from a plush seat behind a panel of bulletproo­f glass.

“I’m more worried about the freedom of Pakistan than my life,” he told the crowd. “I will fight for this country until my last drop of blood.”

The rally was squeezed onto a motorway in Rawalpindi, a garrison city neighborin­g the capital Islamabad and home to the headquarte­rs of the country’s powerful military.

‘Imported government’

Saghir Ahmed, a 32-year-old tailor, was among thousands arriving in the long build-up to Khan’s speech atop a platform draped with banners depicting a clenched fist breaking shackles.

Having shut his shop to attend, Ahmed said Pakistan’s dire economic situation — with galloping inflation and a nosediving rupee — has made life “unbearable.”

“We hope Khan will introduce some reforms and the situation will improve,” he told Agence France-Presse (AFP).

Khan attracts cultish devotion from supporters, but on Saturday made his speech hundreds of meters (yards) from the bulk of the crowd of around 25,000 to 30,000, separated by coils of barbed wire and a buffer of police officers.

In the November 3 assassinat­ion attempt, a gunman opened fire from close range as Khan’s opentop container truck made its way through a crowded street.

Buildings overlookin­g the site of the rally were searched overnight, a police official told AFP, while snipers were perched on rooftops surveying the mostly male supporters whipping red and green flags back and forth.

Khan himself was surrounded by a crush of bodyguards at all times, while mobile phone signals were jammed in the vicinity.

Authoritie­s threw a ring of steel around Islamabad to prevent his supporters from marching on government buildings, with thousands of security personnel deployed and roads blocked by shipping containers.

Khan-led protests in May spiraled into 24 hours of chaos, with the capital blockaded and running clashes across Pakistan between police and protesters.

Khan told Saturday’s rally that he would not be calling on supporters to enter the capital.

‘Red alert’

Interior Minister Rana Sanaullah — who Khan accuses of being involved in the assassinat­ion plot — issued a “red alert” Friday, warning of security threats to the rally.

He listed Pakistan’s Taliban and al-Qaida among the extremist groups that could harm Khan.

The government says the assassinat­ion attempt was the work of a lone wolf now in custody, with police leaking a “confession” video by the junk-shop owner saying he acted because Khan was against Islam.

But Khan, a former internatio­nal cricket player with a playboy reputation before he married, said he has long warned that the government would blame a religious fanatic for any attempt to kill him.

Without offering evidence, Khan has named Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, interior minister Sanaullah, and a senior military officer of being the architects of the assassinat­ion attempt — charges they have all dismissed as lies.

Saturday’s rally took place two days after the government named a former spymaster as the next military chief.

General Syed Asim Munir’s appointmen­t ended months of speculatio­n over a position long considered the real power in the nuclear-armed Islamic nation of 220 million people.

Munir served as chief of the Inter-Services Intelligen­ce agency under Khan, but his stint ended after just eight months following a reported falling out.

Pakistan’s military, the world’s sixth-largest, is hugely influentia­l in the country and has staged at least three coups since independen­ce in 1947, ruling for more than three decades.

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