Pakistan’s former prime minister, Imran Khan, on Monday mentioned that his successor Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s brother and PML-N (Pakistan Muslim League (N)) supremo Nawaz Sharif was afraid that Khan’s occasion Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) “is extra common than the ruling coalition,” and therefore the federal government was making “deliberate makes an attempt to delay elections”. Khan has been reiterating that the “solely resolution” to the nation’s present political and financial disaster was “instant and clear” elections. It might be talked about right here that Khan was ousted because the nation’s premier amid claims that he was unable to deal with the financial challenges.
Watch: ‘Chor, Gaddaar’: Imran rips Pak PM after by-poll sweep
Chatting with native media community ARY Information, Khan additionally accused the Chief Election Commissioner of Pakistan (CEC) Sikandar Raja Sultan of sabotaging digital voting machines (EVMs) with, and in help of, the Sharif authorities. “We had launched EVMs to carry clear elections within the nation, however CEC Sikandar Raja sabotaged it with the help of PML-N,” he was quoted as saying, accusing the electoral watchdog of being biased.
The PTI Chairman additionally claimed that his occasion had “all of the proof” that Sharif’s ally – the Pakistan Folks’s Get together – brazenly indulged within the rigging. “The Sindh election commissioner is on the provincial authorities’s payroll and we’ve got already approached the judicial council towards him,” he advised the native media. “It’s unlucky that the nation has not witnessed clear polls thus far,” he added.
Imran Khan, who was ousted in April following a no-confidence vote, acquired a lift a day in the past by rising victorious on six Nationwide Meeting seats in Sunday by-elections. His occasion reportedly managed to safe six out of eight Nationwide Meeting seats within the essential by-election whereas the Pakistan Peoples Get together (PPP) clinched two – NA-157 Multan and NA-237 Karachi – which have been bagged by the PTI within the 2018 common elections.
(With inputs from information businesses)