Pakistani opposition supporters rally demanding PM Imran Khan to quit

South Asia

TBS Report
14 December, 2020, 04:45 pm
Last modified: 14 December, 2020, 05:17 pm
The parties of former Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and slain former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto are part of the movement

Opposition protests have gathered momentum in Pakistan as tens of thousands of people defied coronavirus restrictions to demand Prime Minister Imran Khan step down and renew criticism over the military's role in politics.

An alliance of 11 opposition parties, known as the Pakistan Democratic Movement, demonstrated in the central city of Lahore on Sunday, in the culmination of the first phase of protests before a planned march on the capital of Islamabad in January to pile pressure on Khan's government, reports the Al Jazeera.

The parties of former Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and slain former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto are part of the movement.

Double-digit inflation, a poor economy, curbs on civil liberties and media censorship are cited by the opposition as the reason for the protests.

Nawaz Sharif, the three-time prime minister was forced by the Pakistani Supreme Court to step down over corruption allegations in 2017 and was convicted and sentenced to a prison term a year later, just days ahead of the general election won by Khan.

He has been living in the United Kingdom since November 2019, when he left Pakistan on medical bail to receive treatment for a blood platelet issue that doctors said threatened his life.

Sharif, who blames generals and judges for what he says were trumped up charges, was expected to address the Lahore rally through video-link from London. At previous rallies, he has accused the army and intelligence chiefs of rigging the 2018 national elections to block his party from seeking a new term.

For his part, Khan has accused Sharif of "playing" regional foe "India's game" by criticising Pakistan's powerful military.

Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan lambasted the joint opposition for "endangering people's lives during Covid-19 spike" and reiterated that he would not give an NRO to the opposition leaders.

"Let me once again reiterate: I will never give an NRO. Whatever future plans of further blackmail PDM may have, my message is categorical: There will never be an NRO from my govt no matter what tactics the looters devise," the Pakistani prime minister said in a tweet.

"Pathetic. PDM spent so much money, time, effort & displayed utter callousness by endangering ppl's lives during COVID19 spike — showing the scant regard they have for citizens' safety & well-being. All this just to blackmail me into giving them an NRO to save their looted wealth," he said in another tweet.

 

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