Two leaks in single day spotlight alleged political intrigues during Khan’s tenure as PM

Pakistan's former Prime Minister Imran Khan attends a session at the National Assembly in Islamabad on June 28, 2019. (Photo courtesy: @ImranKhanOfficial/Facebook)
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Updated 07 October 2022
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Two leaks in single day spotlight alleged political intrigues during Khan’s tenure as PM

  • In Friday’s leak, a voice believed to be Khan’s is heard discussing the possibility of “buying” five legislators
  • Chaudhry Fawad Hussain, a top Khan aide, dismissed the leak, calling it a “joining together of voices”

ISLAMABAD: Leaked audio recordings, two in a single day, have put the spotlight on political intrigues at the Prime Minister’s Office during the term of now ousted premier Imran Khan, with one raising questions about his involvement in political horse-trading and the other about the truth to his allegations that he was removed from office in a foreign conspiracy.

Last month, a slew of audio recordings of conversations between key government figures were leaked online from the PM’s Office. The first set of leaks included discussions between Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and members of his cabinet, while the last three leaks have purportedly featured Khan’s discussions with top aides while he was in office.

The first Khan leak last week revolved around a conversation between Khan when he was PM and his then principal secretary Azam Khan about a diplomatic cipher that was at the center of Khan’s allegations that his ouster was part of a regime change conspiracy hatched by the United States. Washington denies this.

In Friday’s first leak, a voice believed to be Khan’s is heard discussing the possibility of “buying” five legislators. Arab News could not independently verify the timing of the recording but it was widely reported that it was a conversation in the days leading up to the no-confidence vote in which Khan was removed from office.

Before Khan, no prime minister in Pakistan’s history was ever ousted through a no-confidence motion.

Several lawmakers from Khan’s then ruling Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party withdrew their support for him ahead of the no-confidence vote, unleashing accusations from Khan and his supporters that their loyalties had been ‘bought’ by opponents. Finally, opposition parties were able to secure 174 votes in the 342-member house in support of the no-confidence motion, making it a majority vote against Khan.

“You have a big misunderstanding that now the numbers game is over … don’t think that it is over,” a voice believed to be Khan’s is heard saying in the latest leak. It is unclear who he was addressing.

“48 hours is a long long time, there are major things happening, I am myself doing many moves that I can’t make public,” he added.

Then in what is believed to be a reference to horse-trading, Khan said:

“Five [lawmakers] I am buying myself ... I have five … send the message that those five, they are very important, and tell him [unknown] that if he can secure those five, if those are turned to ten, then the game is in our hands.”

Khan is heard advising his audience members not to worry “if this is right or wrong” since the public, he said, was alarmed and wanted us [Khan] to “at any cost win this.”

“Any tactic we have [use it],” he said. “If someone wins over even one [legislator] it will make a difference.”

In the second audio clip released on Friday, a voice believed to be Khan’s can be heard telling his aides Asad Umar, then planning minister, and Shireen Mazari, who held the human rights portfolio, to forcefully push the narrative of a “foreign conspiracy” to oust his government.

“What we are doing with the letter now, we should have done it a bit earlier, [ideally] a week or 10 days earlier,” a voice believed to be Umar’s can be heard saying in the clip.  

In April, the Khan government handed an official protest to the US embassy over what it called Washington's interference in the country's affairs, referring to a diplomatic note from a Pakistani diplomat based on his meetings with US officials that Khan has said was evidence of a foreign conspiracy to oust him from power.

Just weeks later, Khan was removed from office in a parliamentary vote of no-confidence, which he blamed, and continues to blame, on a conspiracy hatched by the United States with Khan’s rivals in Pakistan, including current PM Sharif. Both deny the charge but Khan has held rallies across the country since, sticking to the theory of a foreign conspiracy and challenging the mandate of the Sharif government.

“The impact of this letter [cipher] has been huge, I mean what we are thinking about it, its impact has been felt around the world,” Khan is purportedly heard saying.

Mazari interrupts, saying even the Chinese had issued a statement “condemning the US for interfering in our internal affairs.”

“Our strategy will be…, see the public is already with us,” Khan allegedly tells the audience members. “Now, on the basis of the public’s pressure, we want that the height of the pressure to be such that on Sunday [day of vote of no-confidence], whosoever goes to vote in the assembly should be branded for life and you have to brand them as Mir Jafar and Mir Sadiq.”

The reference was to two leaders in the 18th century who have become symbols of treachery in subcontinental history for siding with the British as they colonized the region. Repeatedly narrating their stories during rallies in the last few months, Khan has reminded his supporters that Mir Jaffar had joined hands with the British despite being the commander-in-chief of a governor of the Mughal emperor while Mir Sadiq betrayed Tipu Sultan, the ruler of the Kingdom of Mysore. The metaphors have been widely believed to be a veiled reference to what Khan believes is a betrayal of his government by the military, which did not block his ouster.

In Friday’s leak, Khan then allegedly tells his aides to “spoon-feed people [the foreign conspiracy narrative] as their minds are currently fertile grounds that you can feed them now.”

Last week, Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif ordered an investigation into the leaked audio conversations and called the affair a “major lapse.” He set up a committee to investigate the leaks and called for a review of cybersecurity at the prime minister's and other government office.

On Friday, Interior Minister Rana Sanaullah chaired the first meeting of the high-powered committee on the cyber and electronic security of government offices.  

A statement from Sanaullah's office said the minister had directed the committee to complete its task within two weeks.

“The committee will review the investigation into the cyber security breach at the Prime Minister's House. The committee will also review the existing cyber security protocols for the Prime Minister's Office and House,” the statement said, adding that the committee would formulate an action plan to make cyber security protocols foolproof for the future.    

“The committee will also formulate recommendations regarding ensuring electronic security of all government offices,” statement added.

A senior leader of Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party, Chaudhry Fawad Hussain, reacted to the first leaked audio on Friday as a "joining together of voices."

"People know where these audios are being made and how they are being made, now the decision will be made at Haqiqi Freedom march," he said, referring to a planned long march by the PTI party. He has previously said the leaks were a way for the government of PM Sharif to distract the public from its corruption.

 

 


Pakistan PM directs task force to propose budget plan for low-cost housing

Updated 21 May 2025
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Pakistan PM directs task force to propose budget plan for low-cost housing

  • Pakistan faces a housing crisis, with the shortage particularly acute in urban areas
  • PM says ahead of the budget low-cost housing is his administration’s top priority

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said on Wednesday his administration is prioritizing the development of low-cost housing while directing a task force to present financing recommendations to include the facility in the upcoming budget.

Pakistan has been facing a housing crisis, with the World Bank suggesting two years ago it was short of an estimated 10 million housing units. The shortage is particularly acute in urban areas due to rapid population growth, unregulated expansion and high land and construction prices.

The federal budget, which will be presented to the National Assembly next month, is expected to outline measures to tackle the crisis as the new fiscal year begins in July.

“The government’s foremost priority is to facilitate access to housing through low-cost schemes,” Sharif said during a task force meeting to address the issue.

“Such projects will not only make residential units accessible to the common man but also stimulate economic growth and create employment opportunities,” he continued.

The prime minister instructed the task force to work with the finance ministry and banks to prepare detailed financing proposals for affordable housing, with the aim of making them part of the upcoming budget.

He also emphasized that developing the construction sector was key to sustainable economic growth.

Officials briefed the prime minister on ongoing reforms to the Condominium Act 2025 and Foreclosure Law, saying they were in their final stages and were expected to ease access to housing loans under the new schemes.


Pakistan says India using ‘terrorism’ as foreign policy tool after school bus attack in Balochistan

Updated 21 May 2025
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Pakistan says India using ‘terrorism’ as foreign policy tool after school bus attack in Balochistan

  • New Delhi rejects Pakistan’s allegation, calls it an attempt to deflect responsibility for internal failures
  • PM Sharif visits Balochistan after school bus bombing kills three children, leaves eight critically wounded

KARACHI: Pakistan urged the international community on Wednesday to condemn what it called India’s use of “terrorism” as a foreign policy tool, after a vehicle-borne improvised explosive device targeted a school bus in the southwestern Balochistan province, killing at least three children and injuring 39 others, including eight critically.

Balochistan, Pakistan’s largest province by landmass and rich in mineral resources, has long faced an insurgency led by separatist groups who accuse Islamabad of exploiting local resources while neglecting the population. The government denies the claims, citing investments in health, education and infrastructure.

In recent months, the insurgency has intensified, with groups like the Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA) carrying out high-casualty attacks on civilians and security forces, including taking hostages at a passenger train. Pakistan says it has evidence linking India to these attacks, though New Delhi has denied involvement and distanced itself from the Khuzdar school bombing.

However, Islamabad described the attack as a “sequel” to India’s missile and drone strikes earlier this month, accusing New Delhi of deploying militant proxies to destabilize the country, as Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and Field Marshal Asim Munir visited the region to meet injured children in hospital.

“These terrorist groups — masquerading under ethnic pretenses — are not only being exploited by India as instruments of state policy, but also stand as a stain on the honor and values of the Baloch and Pashtun people, who have long rejected violence and extremism,” said a statement issued by the PM Office after Sharif’s visit to Quetta.

Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and Field Marshal Asim Munir being briefed on the Khuzdar school bus attack, in Quetta on May 21, 2025. (Photo courtesy: Handout/PMO)

“India’s reliance on such morally indefensible tactics, particularly the deliberate targeting of children, demands urgent attention from the international community,” it added. “The use of terrorism as a tool of foreign policy must be unequivocally condemned and confronted.”

The prime minister and the accompanying delegation was briefed by Balochistan’s Chief Minister Sardar Sarfraz Bugti and local military officials on the attack, which also killed two soldiers and injured 53 people in total.

The official statement said Pakistan’s security forces and law enforcement agencies “will relentlessly pursue all those involved in this barbaric act,” vowing to bring “the architects, abettors and enablers of this crime” to justice.

It added the incident had exposed India’s “cunning role” to the world, revealing how it orchestrated militant violence while simultaneously portraying itself as a victim.

 

 

India’s Ministry of External Affairs earlier in the day rejected Pakistan’s allegations, describing them as Islamabad’s attempt to deflect responsibility for its own failings and internal issues.

The latest attack follows a brief military standoff between the two countries earlier this month, which ended in a ceasefire on May 10.

While hostilities along the border have subsided, both sides continue to trade diplomatic barbs, accusing each other of sponsoring terrorism and destabilizing the region.

School bus targeted in a suicide blast in pictured in Pakistan's southwestern Khuzdar district on May 21, 2025. (Jawad Yousafzai)

The attack in Khuzdar, which targeted children en route to an army-run school, was condemned by US Chargé d’Affaires Natalie Baker and UNICEF in separate statements.

It was also reminiscent of one of the deadliest militant attacks in Pakistan’s history when over 130 children were killed in a military school in the northern city of Peshawar in 2014. That attack was claimed by the Pakistani Taliban group.


India expels second Pakistani diplomat amid ongoing tensions

Updated 21 May 2025
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India expels second Pakistani diplomat amid ongoing tensions

  • India declares Pakistani diplomat persona non grata, orders him to leave the country within 24 hours
  • India expelled another Pakistani diplomat on May 13, prompting a tit-for-tat response from Islamabad

ISLAMABAD: India has expelled a second Pakistani diplomat within ten days, declaring him persona non grata for activities “not in keeping with his official status,” the external affairs ministry in New Delhi announced on Wednesday.

The move comes amid heightened tensions between the two countries following a military standoff earlier this month. Despite a ceasefire agreement reached on May 10, diplomatic relations between the nuclear-armed neighbors remain strained.

“The Government of India has declared a Pakistani official, working at the Pakistan High Commission in New Delhi, persona non grata for indulging in activities not in keeping with his official status in India,” the Indian ministry said in its statement.

“The official has been asked to leave India within 24 hours,” it added.

This is the second such expulsion in recent weeks. On May 13, India expelled a Pakistani diplomat on similar grounds. In response, Pakistan declared an Indian High Commission staffer in Islamabad persona non grata.

The Indian ministry also summoned the Charge d’Affaires of the Pakistan High Commission to issue a demarche, emphasizing that Pakistani diplomats must not “misuse their privileges and status in any manner.”

As of now, Pakistan’s foreign office has not responded to the latest development.


Pakistan’s health minister assures Palestinian counterpart of medical support

Updated 21 May 2025
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Pakistan’s health minister assures Palestinian counterpart of medical support

  • Syed Mustafa Kamal meets Dr. Maged Abu Ramadan at the World Health Assembly in Switzerland
  • Israel has repeatedly targeted hospitals and health workers in Gaza, causing international concern

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s health minister Syed Mustafa Kamal informed his Palestinian counterpart that a framework has been developed to provide medical assistance to the people of Gaza, according to an official statement on Wednesday, during a meeting on the sidelines of the 78th World Health Assembly in Switzerland.

Kamal’s meeting with the Palestinian health minister, Dr. Maged Awni Muhammad Abu Ramadan, took place at a time when Israeli forces have repeatedly targeted hospitals and health facilities in Gaza, crippling the enclave’s health care system.

Israeli attacks have also led to international concern over violations of humanitarian norms in the war-torn Palestinian territory.

“We stand with our Palestinian brothers and will provide all possible medical support to heal their wounds,” the health ministry quoted Kamal as saying.

He strongly condemned Israel’s targeting of hospitals and health care workers, urging the international community to take concrete action to end the atrocities against Palestinians, including women and children.

“The brutality and oppression must stop,” he was quoted as saying. “The world must hold Israel accountable.”

Earlier this week, Pakistan condemned Israel’s targeting of hospitals in Gaza and described its announcement of taking control of the entire Palestinian territory as a “grave threat” to regional peace.

The remarks by the Pakistani foreign office came after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declared his government wanted to take control of the Gaza Strip.


Pakistani military blames ‘Indian-sponsored’ militants for children’s death in northwest this week

Updated 21 May 2025
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Pakistani military blames ‘Indian-sponsored’ militants for children’s death in northwest this week

  • Protests broke out in North Waziristan after a suspected drone strike reportedly led to the killings of four children
  • The military says initial investigations have revealed the incident was carried out by ‘Fitna Al Khwarij’ militants

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s military on Wednesday denied responsibility for the death of four children in North Waziristan earlier this week, attributing the incident to a proscribed militant network which it said was operating on “the behest of their Indian masters.”

The incident occurred on May 19 in the Hurmuz village of Mir Ali tehsil, where a suspected drone strike reportedly led to the death of four children from the same family and injuries to five others, including a woman.

The tragedy sparked protests in the area, with locals staging a sit-in and refusing to bury the deceased until authorities provided clarity on the incident and ensured accountability for the loss of innocent lives.

In a statement released on Wednesday, the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), the military’s media wing, dismissed allegations implicating Pakistan’s security forces in the strike, labeling the accusations as “entirely baseless” and part of a “coordinated disinformation campaign” aimed at discrediting the military’s counterterrorism efforts.

“Initial findings have established that this heinous act has been orchestrated and executed by Indian-sponsored Fitna Al Khwarij,” the statement said, using a term commonly employed by Pakistani authorities to describe extremist factions like the Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP).

The term “khwarij” is rooted in early Islamic history and refers to an extremist sect that declared other Muslims apostates.

“It is evident that these elements — acting at the behest of their Indian Masters — continue to exploit civilian areas and vulnerable populations as shields to conduct their reprehensible acts of terrorism,” the statement added. “Such tactics aims to unsuccessfully sow discord between the local population and the security forces, who together remain resolute to uproot the menace of terrorism.”

The military also reaffirmed its commitment to bringing the perpetrators to justice, emphasizing its ongoing efforts to combat militant violence in the region.