Imran Khan blames military for CM disappearance, says Pakistan scene is ‘Yahya Khan Part II’

3 months ago 14
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ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (

PTI

) chief Imran Khan blamed the establishment, a euphemism for the military in Pakistan, for the disappearance of his party’s chief minister of the northwestern

Khyber Pakhtunkhwa

province,

Ali Amin Gandapur

, from Islamabad.
Speaking to journalists at Rawalpindi prison on Friday, Khan claimed that Gandapur “was disappeared” by elements within the establishment and everyone knows who is responsible for such actions, an indirect reference to Pakistan’s intelligence agencies.

He accused the military establishment of undermining the country’s institutions.
According to Khan, the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa CM has remained silent over his disappearance out of loyalty and respect for the establishment. Khan warned the current situation in the country is reminiscent of “Yahya Khan Part II”.
Imran also spoke on the current state of governance, claiming that Prime Minister

Shehbaz Sharif

required approval (from the military) for every decision and could soon face a similar fate — disappearance.

Gandapur went missing from Islamabad during a crackdown on PTI last Monday, a day after he had delivered a hard-hitting speech at a rally demanding the release of Imran Khan. He later turned up in Peshawar. Gandapur, according to PTI, was invited by the military authorities to discuss law and order matters, but he was allegedly detained without consent. His statement that he would personally secure Khan’s release in the next two weeks triggered a sharp backlash in a country where the powerful military has directly ruled the country for three decades and wielded enormous political influence even when civilian governments were in office.

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