Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan wins vote of confidence

Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan won a vote of confidence in parliament on Saturday, the speaker announced after the vote, backed by 178 lawmakers in the 342-member National Assembly.
All 160 members of the opposition had boycotted
the vote.
PTI has 157 MPs in the lower house. Khan was
backed by 176 members when elected prime minister in 2018.
"I thank my
allied parties, who have always stood behind me during every test," Khan
said in his address to the parliamentarians.
He said lawmakers from his party were perturbed
after what had happened in the recent Senate elections but had emerged as a
strong team for Saturday's vote.
Khan volunteered to face the confidence vote
after his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaaf (PTI) party's candidate was defeated in a
Senate election by a former prime minister earlier this week.
The opposition candidate secured 169 votes
compared to 164 for the candidate from Khan's party, who is the incumbent
finance minister.
The defeat means the government no longer has a
majority in the parliamentary chamber that elects the prime minister.
Khan, who is midway through his five-year term,
came to power in national elections since tainted by allegations that the
country's powerful military supported him.
Pakistan's generals have ruled the country for
decades and are accused of manoeuvring to hand-pick civilian governments to
block the way of democratic leaders.
Though Khan denies benefiting from military
support, he turned to the army after losing the key senate election.
Khan held a meeting with army Chief General
Qamar Javed Bajwa and the head of the country's spy agency on Thursday, which
many believe was linked to the confidence vote.
Khan is now the second Pakistani prime minister
who has volunteered to face a confidence vote after former premier Nawaz Sharif
in 1993.
The special session of the parliament was
attended by provincial chief ministers, governors and other senior government
officials.
Pakistan Democratic Movement (PDM), a
multi-party opposition alliance, has announced that a new round of
anti-government rallies will start from March 26.
Outside the parliament building, a large number
of PTI workers gathered to celebrate Khan's victory.
A few hours ahead of the vote, some of the
workers tried to attack senior leaders from the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz
(PML-N).