Tag: Imran Khan

  • Former Pakistan prime minister, Khan shot during protest march

    Former Pakistan prime minister, Khan shot during protest march

    A former Pakistan Prime Minister, Imran Khan, has been shot in the eastern part of the country one of his aides said.

    According to the aide, Khan is still alive but seriously injured due to the bullet wounds.

    The attack took place in Wazirabad, about 200 km (120 miles) from the capital, Islamabad on Thursday, Morning.

    According to a member of Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party, many of Khan’s colleagues were also wounded.

    Reports also have it that one person has been reported dead.

    “A man opened fire with an automatic weapon. Several people are wounded. Imran Khan is also injured,” Asad Umar told Reuters.

    Khan, was leading a protest march in Islamabad to demand snap elections when a bullet hit him in the shin.

    Imran Ahmed Khan Niazi HI PP is a Pakistani former cricketer and convicted politician who served as the 22nd prime minister of Pakistan from August 2018 until April 2022, when he was ousted through a no-confidence motion.

  • Imran Khan fallen, but not in the streets – By Owei Lakemfa

    Imran Khan fallen, but not in the streets – By Owei Lakemfa

    SOMETIMES the difference between a coup and a democratic process can be so narrow as to be interchangeable. The move to oust Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan had been in the offing for some time, but there were questions of methodology, and how the populace may react.

    This was more so when his replacement was likely to come from the controversial family of Nawaz Sharif who leads the Pakistan Muslim League.

    Khan as the opposition leader had got the Supreme Court in 2017 to indict him for using off-shore holding companies to buy luxury properties in London. Nawaz had fled to Britain before the indictment. His daughter Maryam and her husband, Muhammad Safdar, had also been indicted.

    As the plotters made their moves to effect the regime change through a vote of no-confidence in parliament and started enticing legislators, the former international cricket star publicly identified them. On March 27, 2022, he told the public that the United States, US, was engineering and co-ordinating the regime change and cobbling together an internal alliance of questionable Pakistani politicians and some elements in the military.

    At the rally, he produced a diplomatic cable from Asad Majeed Khan, Pakistan’s Ambassador to the US which allegedly contained threats by high-ranking US officials, including Assistant Secretary of State Donald Lu, that unless Khan’s government is replaced, there can be no improved relations between both countries. A diplomatic way of demanding the replacement of the Khan government.

    Pakistan’s Human Rights Minister Shireen Mazari had tweeted in reaction to the moves to unseat Khan, that his independent foreign policy “does not sit well with those powers which have viewed Pakistan as a state where leaders are subservient to foreign diktat; Zulfikar Ali Bhutto was hanged because of his independent foreign policy; regime change is a frequent tool of powerful states and allies with vested interests from within.” The cable from the ambassador had been received on March 7, 2022, and the next day, the opposition requisitioned the National Assembly for a vote of no-confidence against Khan.

    There is a saying in Nigeria that if the witch cried in the night, and the child dies in the morning, who does not know that it was the witch that cried at night that killed the child? It was obvious the Pakistani opposition parties were acting out a script that Khan’s government claimed had been crafted in Washington.

    To be sure, Khan had in the eyes of the US, committed a number of sins as leader of a hitherto subservient country. The America Central Intelligence Agency, CIA, had since the 1980s run the Pakistani intelligence with which it created, trained and hosted the Mujahedeen.

    It was a group of young Muslims like Osaman Bin Laden recruited across the Arab world to fight Soviet troops stationed in neighbouring Afghanistan and overthrow that country’s pro-communist governments. That war was presented to the youths as a jihad to remove godless people from power. The Mujahedeen later mutated into various groups like al-Qaeda, the terrorist Pakistani Taliban, the nationalist Afghanistan Taliban and arms of the Islamic State, ISIS.

    One of Khan’s capital sins was to try to run a foreign policy independent of the US. He also had the guts not just to criticise the American occupation of Afghanistan but also to call for international support and funding for the new Taliban government that had forced America and Western powers to flee that country in August 2021, after 20 years of occupation.

    On the day Russian troops rolled into Ukraine, Khan was making a previously scheduled visit to Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow. One of the ‘sins’ he committed was his refusal to condemn Russia or support Ukraine.

    To him, it was a war in that Pakistan should not be involved as it has close military and economic ties with both countries, including being a major importer of Ukrainian wheat.

    Khan argued that the best solution is to get both sides to the negotiation table saying: “Now, what we want to do does not become part of any bloc. We want to have trading relations with all countries… The countries that rely on a military conflict have not studied history properly.” Khan added that: “The developing world really wishes that there is not another Cold War.” He offered to organise peace talks between the warring parties, but America and its allies were not interested in either a ceasefire or negotiated settlement in Ukraine.

    When on March 1, 2022, the heads of 22 Western diplomatic missions in Islamabad released a joint letter asking Pakistan to support a resolution at the United Nations condemning Russia’s military operations in Ukraine, Khan retorted: “What do you think of us? Are we your slaves…that whatever you say, we will do?” At the UN, Pakistan abstained.

    The Khan government is credited with handling quite well the COVID-19 pandemic through its ‘smart lockdown strategy’ leading to The Economist rating it as the ‘third-best performing country’ in handling the pandemic.

    The administration within 22 months reduced the trade deficit from $37 billion to $21 billion and the current account deficit from $20 billion to $3 billion. Within the same period, the State Bank reserves increased from $9.7 billion to $12.3 billion, tax collection increased by 17 per cent and 11.4 million people in Punjab alone received insurance cover.

    Interestingly, the charges against Imran Khan include double-digit inflation, especially during the COVID-19 period and the devaluation of the currency. As the plot to remove him thickened, Imran Khan whose power resides with the Pakistani masses, not the parliament, decided to dissolve parliament and call early elections which he hoped would change the configuration of the parliament. But the Supreme Court on April 7, 2022, ruled his move, illegal. Two days later, 174 members of the National Assembly passed a no-confidence vote on him.

    Khan was replaced by Nawaz’s brother, Shahbaz Sharif, a man facing corruption charges for involvement in an Rs18 billion housing scam. Shahbaz and his sons, Hamza and Salman, also face a Rs7 billion money laundering charge while his son-in-law, Ali Imran Yousuf fled to Britain to avoid corruption charges. Khan turned to the populace and told them: “You have to come out to protect your own future. It is you who have to protect your democracy, your sovereignty, and your independence … this is your duty.”

    An estimated 10 million Pakistanis harkened to Khan’s appeal by pouring out into the streets. So, while Imran Khan has fallen from power, he has not fallen in the streets; he has become the major issue in Pakistani politics. Pakistan is scheduled to go to the polls in August 2023 and Imran Khan, barring foreign and military interventions, has a strong chance of returning to power.

  • The Rage, Range and Age of Imran Khan, By Owei Lakemfa

    By Owei Lakemfa

     

    Once in a while, our troubled world throws up unexpected leaders who may be a force for further degeneration as is the case of American President Donald Trump, or positive change as the new Pakistani Prime Minister, Imran Ahmed Khan Niazi might be. It is still dawn, so too early to predict the former international cricket star who came to power on August 18 and has within a week already engaged his country’s overbearing ‘ally’ the United States in a principled fight over terrorism.

     

    Khan who in his first two weeks in office has triggered a political Tsunami, is intent on creating a “New Pakistan” He told his fellow Pakistanis: “If we do not change our direction we will head towards disaster. The corrupt people will make a lot of noise when we target them. They might come onto the streets or say that democracy is under threat. Either Pakistan will be saved or these corrupt people.”

     

    The populist Khan said the palatial Prime Minister’s official residence is too obscene to house just one family, so he plans to convert it into a tertiary institution while he and his family will stay in the Military Secretary’s three-bedroom house. Ordinarily, he said, he wanted to stay in his private house, but the security services opposed this. Also, Khan has decided to reduce the 524 staff in the Prime Minister’s residence to two , and the 80 cars to two.

     

    Khan complained: “The Prime Minister, which is me, also has 33 bulletproof cars. We have helicopters and airplanes to fly us. We have massive governor houses and every conceivable luxury. On one hand we don’t have money to spend on our people; on the other hand, we have a section of our people living like our colonial masters used to live,” He also cancelled all official travels on first class and said he would auction off all the other bulletproof cars and put the proceeds in the state treasury. As a practical demonstration of his politics, rather than the usual lavish banquet at swearing in ceremonies, only tea was served.

     

    He said his government will build an egalitarian, non-exploitative state based on the on principles of the first Islamic state of Medina. He promises a new society in which all will be equal before the law, political opponents will not be victimized, the judiciary will be independent, the police and military will be re-oriented based on democratic values. His government promises 10 million new jobs and the construction of five million low-cost housing units within five years.

     

    Khan’s declaration: “On our foreign policy, we want to improve our ties with all our neighbours.” might be a profound one as this is a major source of problem for the country, and an international open sore. Over the years, the only part of its border at peace, is the Arabia Sea to its south. Pakistan with its Islamization ideology, has not been comfortable with China, its neigbour in the North which it sees as a godless country. It is uncomfortable with Iran, its South-West neigbour which, although Islamic, is Shiite, in contrast to the mainly Sunni Pakistan. In 1979, Pakistan militarily assisted young Islamic fighters from Afghanistan to attack their country on the claim that the then Afghan Government was communist and therefore godless. It also encouraged its own nationals and youths from other Muslim countries in Asia and the Middle East to join the attacks against Afghanistan. Since then, Pakistan has become quite insecure. Perhaps its most volatile border is that with India. Both countries have virtually been at war footing since August 14, 1947 when they split. They have fought three wars; 1947, 1965 and 1971. The fact that both Pakistan and India have nuclear weapons makes their conflicts more worrisome.

     

    Although there is a general sentiment in Pakistan that the disputed region of Kashmir belongs to it, Khan says the dispute must be rested, and his suggestion it to present the Kashmir matter as a humanitarian issue, as opposed to a territorial dispute. So for him, there can be no military solution. The origin of the Kashmir conflict began at independence when the leadership of that region, despite its Islamic population refused to secede with the rest of Pakistan, opting to remain in India. Khan’s government said it is so desirous for peace that if India takes one step towards Pakistan, it will take two steps in response.

     

    Khan’s position on terrorists, especially the Pakistani Taliban who the Americans have been at war with over the years, is that there can be no military solution, so he favours dialogue. For this, he is considered soft on terrorists and some of his political opponents call him ‘Taliban Khan’ In the past, he had accused America of sabotaging the peace process especially by killing the Pakistani Taliban leader, Hakimullah Mehsud. On October 6, 2012, he joined a caravan protest against American US drone missile strikes in Pakistan.

     

    It is not surprising that this issue of terrorists and how they should be handled, has led to a controversy between Khan and the Americans. The American Secretary of State, Mike Pompeo had called Khan on phone wishing him success, and according to the US State Department readout, Pompeo had also asked Khan to take “decisive action against all terrorists operating in Pakistan”. But Khan’s government said “There was no mention at all in the conversation about terrorists operating in Pakistan. This should be immediately corrected.” But the Americans insisted their version of the conversation is correct. It is not unlikely that during the proposed visit by Pompeo on Wednesday, September 5, both sides will openly disagree on the issue.

     

    Khan played for the Pakistan national cricket team at 18. He played until 1992 when as captain, and with a shoulder injury, he led Pakistan to clinch the Cricket World Cup.

     

    He founded the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (Pakistan Movement for Justice) party, and supported the 1999 General Pervez Musharraf military coup. They later fell apart and Musharraf detained him. Khan escaped, resurfaced at a student protest, was re-arrested and sent to prison only to be freed within days.

     

    One enduring imagery of Khan was a march on then Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif’s official residence. Three people died and about 600 were injured when the protesters stormed the residence.

     

    In the July 25, 2018 elections, his party won 116 of the 270 seats contested; the largest by a single party. Nine independent parliamentarians aligned with his party. Additionally, his party was allocated 28 of the 60 seats reserved for women, and five of 10 seats reserved for minorities. With that, he became Prime Minister; a leader that may rewrite Pakistani history and blaze a new trail in world affairs.