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Islamabad: Former Prime Minister Imran KhanPakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said on Tuesday after Khan’s arrest that politics was defined by “blatant lies” and attacks on institutions.
He said he had no doubts that Imran Khan’s policy is defined by “blatant lies”, “lies”, turns and vicious attacks on institutions. “Bending the judiciary to your whims and acting as if the rules don’t apply to you. What I said about you in my tweet is borne out by facts over the past few years,” he said in a tweet.
In the aftermath of Imran Khan’s arrest, the prime minister issued a series of tweets in response to two questions of the former prime minister, directed at Sharif. Earlier on May 8, Khan asked Sharif if he could name those responsible for the assassination attacks on him.
Khan had tweeted: “As a person who has suffered two assassination attempts in the last few months, may I dare to ask the SS the following questions: 1. Do I, as a citizen, have the right to nominate those I feel responsible for the assassination? legal & constitutional right.”
Sharif responded to Khan’s questions with four counter-questions, “One of them, victimizing the Pakistan Army as an institution is a recurring pattern in your policy after you have been removed from power. Didn’t you resort to constant slandering of the Army leadership and the Intelligence Agency long before the Wazirabad attack?”
In his second question, he asked PM Khan which legal path he chose apart from the daily threat and baseless allegations.
His tweet read: “You have rejected the offer of cooperation from the Federal Government and boycotted the legal process. You were never interested in getting the truth about the attack but used the incriminating incident for petty political purposes.”
President Sharif also asked the head of PTI: “Three, at their request was the fierce campaign on social media against the martyrs of the armed forces after the helicopter crash? Which side does the troll brigade belong to that mocked the martyrs? Low and unimaginable in our politics and culture? With these acts of vandalism / Treacherous on your part, do we need an enemy?
He also made allegations against Khan of using religion for political purposes and against workers in his party to condone, justify, and even celebrate the incident of harassment of the official delegation, which included a female minister, in a mosque.
“Fourth, who used religion for political purposes by describing political incitement in religious terms, a cunning and self-serving attempt to subject political opponents to violence at the hands of your supporters? An incident of harassment and intimidation of an official delegation from a female minister in the courtyard of the Prophet’s Mosque by ignoring all norms of piety and piety?” he added in his tweet.
He also advised Prime Minister Sharif Khan against going to Pakistan, which the former prime minister described as becoming a “jungle”.
“As for your assertion that Pakistan has become a ‘Jungle’, I advise you not to go there, as the facts are often bitter and disastrous. Let’s save this for another day,” the tweet said.
Earlier on Tuesday afternoon, Khan was arrested by the Rangers of the Islamabad High Court – on a warrant from the National Accountability Bureau (NAB).
The PTI chairman was arrested as part of NAB’s investigation into the Al-Qadir Trust case before he appeared before the IHC to claim bail in several FIRs registered against him.
He said he had no doubts that Imran Khan’s policy is defined by “blatant lies”, “lies”, turns and vicious attacks on institutions. “Bending the judiciary to your whims and acting as if the rules don’t apply to you. What I said about you in my tweet is borne out by facts over the past few years,” he said in a tweet.
In the aftermath of Imran Khan’s arrest, the prime minister issued a series of tweets in response to two questions of the former prime minister, directed at Sharif. Earlier on May 8, Khan asked Sharif if he could name those responsible for the assassination attacks on him.
Khan had tweeted: “As a person who has suffered two assassination attempts in the last few months, may I dare to ask the SS the following questions: 1. Do I, as a citizen, have the right to nominate those I feel responsible for the assassination? legal & constitutional right.”
Sharif responded to Khan’s questions with four counter-questions, “One of them, victimizing the Pakistan Army as an institution is a recurring pattern in your policy after you have been removed from power. Didn’t you resort to constant slandering of the Army leadership and the Intelligence Agency long before the Wazirabad attack?”
In his second question, he asked PM Khan which legal path he chose apart from the daily threat and baseless allegations.
His tweet read: “You have rejected the offer of cooperation from the Federal Government and boycotted the legal process. You were never interested in getting the truth about the attack but used the incriminating incident for petty political purposes.”
President Sharif also asked the head of PTI: “Three, at their request was the fierce campaign on social media against the martyrs of the armed forces after the helicopter crash? Which side does the troll brigade belong to that mocked the martyrs? Low and unimaginable in our politics and culture? With these acts of vandalism / Treacherous on your part, do we need an enemy?
He also made allegations against Khan of using religion for political purposes and against workers in his party to condone, justify, and even celebrate the incident of harassment of the official delegation, which included a female minister, in a mosque.
“Fourth, who used religion for political purposes by describing political incitement in religious terms, a cunning and self-serving attempt to subject political opponents to violence at the hands of your supporters? An incident of harassment and intimidation of an official delegation from a female minister in the courtyard of the Prophet’s Mosque by ignoring all norms of piety and piety?” he added in his tweet.
He also advised Prime Minister Sharif Khan against going to Pakistan, which the former prime minister described as becoming a “jungle”.
“As for your assertion that Pakistan has become a ‘Jungle’, I advise you not to go there, as the facts are often bitter and disastrous. Let’s save this for another day,” the tweet said.
Earlier on Tuesday afternoon, Khan was arrested by the Rangers of the Islamabad High Court – on a warrant from the National Accountability Bureau (NAB).
The PTI chairman was arrested as part of NAB’s investigation into the Al-Qadir Trust case before he appeared before the IHC to claim bail in several FIRs registered against him.
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