Imran Khan sustains yet more losses ahead of Pakistan polls
The former prime
minister of Pakistan, Imran Khan, continues to receive one painful blow after
another.
Khan, the leader of opposition
at home, has especially become vulnerable after a series of mass resignations
in his Tehreek-e-Insaf Party.
The resignations
followed two months of violent protests across Pakistan, ones that were described
as a political rebellion against Khan.
The protests came at a
critical time for the Pakistani former prime minister, while his country gears
up for elections.
Observers confirmed,
meanwhile, that the protests came amid mounting accusations against Khan.
Resignations
After two months of
violent protests that shook Pakistan in early May, Khan received a decisive
blow with the withdrawal of dozens of his supporters from his party to launch
their own party before the parliamentary elections expected later this year.
The bloody violence
subsided only after Khan was released by an order from the Supreme Court of
Pakistan.
In the weeks that
followed, a number of senior members of his party abandoned him, disagreeing
with his campaign against the administration of his successor, current Prime Minister
Shahbaz Sharif.
In an unprecedented
move, 57 members of Khan's party – most of them former MPs and other well-known
politicians – announced their resignation from Tehreek-e-Insaf Party.
The same members said
they would establish their own party. The new party, they said, would be called
the Justice Movement Parliamentarians.
They also accused Khan
of pursuing a "policy of hatred and confrontation" in the May
violence.
One of the most
prominent party members who broke ranks with Khan is Pervez Khattak, who served
as defence minister in Khan's government until the former cricket star and
prime minister was ousted through a no-confidence vote in parliament in April
2022.
Khattak assured a
gathering of former MPs and politicians in the city of Peshawar then that they
would bring Khan's life to hell in the upcoming elections, which are likely to
be held in October or November this year.
Khan is appearing
before three different courts in the capital, Islamabad, to follow up on the
consideration of 16 cases against him.
He and his team are
trying to obtain an extension of the bail granted to him previously in 11
different cases, where he was charged with disclosing official state secrets.
The same case involves
the former prime minister, following diplomatic correspondences between Washington
and Islamabad, where Khan said early last year that it is part of an
"American conspiracy" to overthrow his government.
However, Washington
denies involvement in any such conspiracy.