GAKHAR MANDI – Imran Khan, the chairman of the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) and a former prime minister, expressed his worry over electoral interference on Wednesday. He questioned why the institutions were delaying the holding of fair elections if it had been determined to stay impartial and apolitical.
Imran made fun of the current administration by asserting that the coalition government’s officials had stolen the NRO by robbing billions of rupees. Imran reiterated that the country’s citizens can only experience true freedom when justice is served to them, and he added that it is crucial for the judicial system to be in place in order for people to “break the chains of slavery.”
Imran continued by criticising the government’s leaders and allies, including Prime Minister Shehbaz, Interior Minister Rana Sanaullah, Asif Ali Zardari, and Hamza Shehbaz. He claimed that Shehbaz and his son [Hamza] were about to be indicted at the time that Shehbaz was given the opportunity to take office, while Asif Ali Zardari’s case was also resolved.
The PTI leader issued a warning to the current administration, saying that failure to hold elections would be the major make of the coalition government and that the PTI long march would come to an end in Islamabad.
Imran said that people in charge of the NAB have imposed thieves on the nation.
Imran Khan, the leader of the PTI and a former prime minister, claimed that people in charge of the National Accountability Bureau (NAB) had forced thieves on the nation.
Speaking to the marchers, the former premier [Imran] continued by denouncing the current administration, claiming that the trials against their leaders were concluded. Imran added that while the cases against PM Shehbaz Sharif, Nawaz Sharif, Maryam Nawaz, and Hamza Shehbaz have been resolved and that Nawaz is ready to return to the nation, he lashed out at the top brass of the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N).
The PTI head continued to criticise the coalition government, claiming that it had implemented a rule that encouraged the arrest of little criminals while sparing the larger thieves and enabled them to steal the country’s money and hide it abroad.
Imran persisted in criticising the government, this time in terms of inflation, and questioned why it had raised the costs of POL goods, power, and other necessities so much.