ISLAMABAD: Former prime minister Imran Khan on Saturday said he wished to see merit being followed in the appointment of the new army chief later this month, criticizing the government for taking important national security decisions in London.
Khan's remarks came a day after an important meeting was held in London between Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and his older brother and Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) supremo Nawaz Sharif. As per reports, the appointment of the next army chief was discussed between the two.
Army chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa is set to retire on November 28 and has already started paying farewell visits to different garrisons. PM Sharif is authorized to appoint the next army chief from a panel of eligible candidates forwarded to him by the defense ministry.
“The army chief should be appointed on merit,” Khan said, addressing participants of the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party's "long march" to Islamabad. Party supporters listened to his speech, shown to them via video, in Punjab's Lala Musa city.
“I don’t want an army chief of my choice, instead I want to see the best people to be appointed on merit," Khan added.
The former prime minister rejected the government's allegations that he was deliberately making the army chief's appointment controversial. He said that a "family of crooks" [Sharif family] was making important decisions regarding national security and that too, from London.
Nawaz Sharif is in London since 2019 after he was allowed bail by a Pakistani court to seek treatment abroad.
“It is beyond imagination in a civilized society that important decisions of a country are made abroad,” he said. “The most important position of our army is the chief of army staff and its decision is being made in London.”
In a veiled reference to the country’s powerful military, Khan blamed them for imposing a “cabal of crooks” over the nation who had been looting the country for the last 30 years.
“They have imposed them on us again,” he said. “I want to ask their handlers whether they care about Pakistan or not," he asked.
Since his ouster from power in April through a parliamentary vote of no-confidence, Khan has refused to recognize the Sharif-led coalition government and has held mass rallies across the country to mobilize his supporters against it.
Last month, he started a motorized march with a large number of supporters from Lahore to Islamabad to in an attempt to force the government to declare early elections. The elections are scheduled to be held late next year. Sharif has repeatedly denied holding polls earlier.
Khan is recovering at his Lahore home from gunshot wounds he received last week when his protest march reached Wazirabad. Senior PTI leaders, including Shah Mahmood Qureshi and Asad Umar have been leading the march on Islamabad.
The ex-premier has announced he will join the march in Rawalpindi later this month and then lead his supporters from there to the federal capital.