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regular-article-logo Saturday, 27 April 2024

Pakistan: Main Imran Khan ally quits ruling coalition

The former cricket star is battling a series of defections from his alliance in the face of increasing questions over his performance

Reuters, PTI Islamabad Published 31.03.22, 03:59 AM
Imran Khan

Imran Khan File Photo

A main ally of Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan quit his ruling coalition on Wednesday after reaching a pact with opposition parties seeking to oust him, signalling that Khan may be running out of options as he tries to stay on in power.

Former cricket star Khan, 69, is battling a series of defections from his ruling alliance in the face of increasing questions over his performance, including his government’s management of a struggling economy, beset by double-digit inflation and rising deficits.

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An increasingly united Opposition has moved to force him from office in a no-confidence vote due between Thursday and Monday, in which support from Khan’s allied parties was critical.

The leader of Khan’s main parliamentary ally, the Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM), Khalid Maqbool Siddiqui, announced that his party was joining the bloc looking to oust Khan following a written agreement between the two sides.

“I announce that we (MQM) are with you (Opposition) in this change,” Siddiqui said at a news conference alongside Opposition leaders on Wednesday.

Khan’s party does not have a simple majority in the National Assembly by itself and needs the support of coalition allies and the MQM, based in the southern port city of Karachi, has been his biggest ally in parliament.

“We have sent our resignations to the Prime Minister,” Amin-ul-Haq, a member of Khan’s cabinet from the MQM, told local television channel Geo News.

Khan’s ouster would likely mean another round of instability in the nuclear armed south Asian country, in which the military has a long record of intervening in politics and no Prime Minister has completed a full five-year term in its history. Opposition parties accuse Khan of mismanaging the economy, foreign policy and resorting to heavy-handed measures against critics.

With the support of the MQM, the combined Opposition has, on paper, the requisite numbers to oust Khan.

Army chief

Pakistan’s information minister Fawad Chaudhry on Wednesday rejected reports about the army chief asking Khan to resign.

Chaudhry briefly chatted with the media in Islamabad where he was asked about reports regarding a meeting between army chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa and Khan. “Neither has the army chief asked for his resignation, nor will he resign,” the minister said.

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