Categories: Top Stories

Imran Khan on His Plan to Return to Power

Political leaders often boast of inner steel. Imran Khan can point to three bullets dug out of his right leg. It was in November that a lone gunman opened fire on Khan during a rally, wounding the 70-year-old as well as several supporters, one fatally. “One bullet damaged a nerve so my foot is still recovering,” says the former Pakistani Prime Minister and onetime cricket icon. “I have a problem walking for too long.”

If the wound has slowed Khan, he doesn’t show it in a late-March Zoom interview. There is the same bushy mane, the easy laugh, prayer beads wrapped nonchalantly around his left wrist. But in the five years since our last conversation, something has changed. Power—or perhaps its forfeiture—has left its imprint. Following his ouster in a parliamentary no-confidence vote in April 2022, Khan has mobilized his diehard support base in a “jihad,” as he puts it, to demand snap elections, claiming he was unfairly toppled by a U.S.-sponsored plot. ​​(The State Department has denied the allegations.)

The actual intrigue is purely Pakistani. Khan lost the backing of the country’s all-powerful military after he refused to endorse its choice to lead Pakistan’s intelligence services, known as ISI, because of his close relationship with the incumbent. When Khan belatedly greenlighted the new chief, the opposition sensed weakness and pounced with the no-confidence vote. Khan then took his outrage to the streets, with rallies crisscrossing the nation for months.

“Imran Khan can communicate with all strata of society on their level,” says Shaheena Bhatti, 63, a professor of literature in Rawalpindi. “The other politicians are … not going to do anything for the country because they’re only in it for themselves.”

The November attack on Khan’s life only intensified the burning sense of injustice in members of his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party, or PTI, who have since clashed with police in escalating street battles involving slingshots and tear gas. Although an avowed religious fanatic was arrested for the shooting, Khan continues to accuse an assortment of rival politicians of pulling the strings: incumbent Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif—brother of Khan’s longtime nemesis, former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif—as well as Interior Minister Rana Sanaullah and Major General Faisal Naseer. (All have denied the accusation.) 

In addition to bullets, Khan has also been hit by charges—143 over the past 11 months, by his count, including corruption, sedition, blasphemy, and terrorism—which he claims have been concocted in an attempt to disqualify him from politics. After Sharif’s cabinet declared on March 20 that the PTI was “a gang of militants” whose “enmity against the state” could not be tolerated, police arrested hundreds of Khan supporters in raids. 

Courtesy: Time

The Frontier Post

Recent Posts

Who are the Hamas leaders the ICC is seeking arrest warrants for?

The Hague (AFP): The prosecutor for the International Criminal Court on Monday applied for arrest…

8 mins ago

Democrats revive US border security bill as election looms

WASHINGTON (AFP): The US Senate's Democratic leadership will launch a doomed bid this week to…

9 mins ago

Girl, 6, dies after being found unconscious in Swiss forest: police

BERN (AFP): A six-year-old girl, who was found unconscious in a forest after she disappeared…

9 mins ago

PM visits Iranian Embassy to offer condolences over Iran’s President’s tragic death

F.P. Report ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shahbaz Sharif visited the Iranian Embassy in Islamabad this afternoon…

36 mins ago

Law Minister terms IHC ’s remarks in poet’s abductions case beyond its mandate

F.P. Report ISLAMABAD: Law Minister Azam Nazeer Tarar has told the judiciary that it did…

37 mins ago

Pakistan, Turkiye vow to strengthen bilateral cooperation

F.P. Report ISLAMABAD: Pakistan and Turkiye have expressed the resolve to strengthen bilateral and regional…

37 mins ago

This website uses cookies.