ISLAMABAD: Former prime minister Imran Khan has decided to announce his party’s future plan of action at a public rally on Thursday, as the government promised to adopt a “zero-tolerance” policy toward political violence in Pakistan after a high-profile meeting of the top civilian and military leadership on Tuesday.
Supporters of Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party have been facing serious allegations of setting government buildings, including sensitive military installations, on fire after the ex-premier’s arrest on corruption charges from the judicial complex in Islamabad last week.
Some top PTI leaders initially downplayed the violence by describing it as a “natural reaction” to Khan’s arrest due to his popularity among people. However, the PTI has tried to distance itself from all the vandalism that took place on May 9 while demanding impartial inquiry to determine who was responsible for it.
Faced with a tough situation amid a crackdown against his party leaders and sympathizers, Khan said in a video message he was going to resume his public rallies from Muridke, a town located near eastern Lahore city, from Thursday while inviting PTI supporters in large numbers.
“I am going to hold my first public rally in Muridke,” he told PTI followers. “I want all the people living nearby to attend the gathering so I can share my future plan with you about how we want to rescue our country from [the current] quagmire, how we want to set ourselves truly free, and how we have to snatch our rights and freedom.”
He reiterated that no one had ever “given freedom to anyone in a plate.”
Khan emphasized the importance of a strong system of justice, saying it was the only way to safeguard the fundamental rights of people.
Meanwhile, one of Khan’s close aides, Chaudhry Fawad Hussain, condemned the events of May 9 and said he was deeply saddened by violence at the army’s General Headquarters in Rawalpindi and the corps commander’s residence in Lahore.
“As the spokesperson of the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party, I feel that these developments were extremely shameful,” he said. “None of this should have happened. Anyone who is found responsible for these incidents, whether they belong to PTI or not, must be brought to justice.”
The government has already described the events of May 9 as “acts of terrorism”. Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif recently said those who were involved in vandalism would soon be tried in anti-terror courts.