Imran Khans says he will lead the ‘biggest procession in Pakistan’s history’ today from Peshawar to Islamabad
PESHAWAR, May 24 (SABAH): Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) Chairman and former prime minister Imran Khan plans to carry on with the party’s “Azadi March” despite the government’s decision earlier on Tuesday to stop the long march towards Islamabad.
Imran Khan, while addressing a press conference in Peshawar along with PTI leaders CM Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Mahmood Khan, Shah Mahmood Qureshi, Parvez Khan Khattak, Asad Umar and others, said he will lead the “biggest procession in Pakistan’s history” today (Wednesday) from Peshawar to Islamabad.
Criticising the PML-N-led government, Imran Khan said that he has been seeing the Sharif family adopting the same tactics that military dictators do since 1985. “They only remember democracy as soon as they leave power,” he said, asking how many times these parties have taken to the streets throughout the PTI government’s term.
“They entered the houses of people and didn’t care for the privacy of women,” he said, adding that the PTI government never tried stopping the then opposition leaders from exercising their right to assemble and stage protests.
The former prime minister then asked if the PTI government made any arrests when PPP Chairman Bilawal Bhutto Zardari and JUI-F Chief Maulana Fazlur Rehman marched towards Islamabad.
Imran Khan condemned that the police entered the house of a retired army major while referring to a video that surfaced on social media, in which a girl could be in seen tears and claiming that the cops had “harassed” her.
“Do we want to make the country Quaid-e-Azam’s Pakistan or the Pakistan of these thieves and robbers?” Imran Khan asked and said that 60% of the federal cabinet comprises criminals who are roaming freely after attaining bails, while they still have cases of corruption worth Rs24 billion against them.
“The crime minister and his son had to be sentenced but now they are making decisions for the country,” he said and claimed that the PTI has not broken any law in its 26 years of political history.
The PTI chairman said that it was the democratic right of his party to carry on with the said that PTI’s “Azadi March” is the party’s democratic right.
“We are marching to Islamabad because it was proved in the National Security Council (NSC) meeting that a foreign conspiracy was hatched and the [PTI] government was toppled,” Khan said, adding that those who have been criminals for the last 30 years were brought into power.
Calling out to the judiciary of Pakistan, the PTI leader said that the courts’ reputation would be tarnished if it permitted what was happening in the country and their silence would “prove that there was no democracy in the country”.
“We are noting the names of each and every official and bureaucrat. Our message to the bureaucracy is that action will be taken against them if they follow illegal orders,” he said.
Imran Khan asked the bureaucracy of Punjab how they could follow the orders of Punjab Chief Minister Hamza Shahbaz, saying “he [Hamza] doesn’t have a majority vote”. He also warned the authorities of action against every unlawful order they follow.
The PTI chairman asked his supporters to “break the chains of fear” while citing the example of how the Afghans fought foreign powers.
Imran Khan said that the government could not put a sea of people, who were willing to march to Islamabad in his support, in jail.
The former prime minister then said that the entire nation was “looking towards the neutrals” to intervene. “You will also be responsible if the country moves towards destruction,” he said. “I have a message for the neutrals, judges, and lawyers: it is a decisive time. I ask the judiciary and neutrals what kind of a government they want”.
He then asked, “what kind of treason was being committed in Pakistan that PTI’s MNAs had to be arrested”.
Speaking about the economic condition of Pakistan, Imran Khan said that the PTI had clearly said that the situation was getting worse but the incumbent government ruined the economy in just 1.5 months. He said that there was only one solution to all the problems the country was facing: immediate elections. Khan warned that he “feared that Pakistan would witness the same fate as Sri Lanka”.