
Imran Khan's sons to lobby US, march in Pakistan in new protest movement — sister
The PTI last week announced it would launch a nationwide protest movement against the government after the Islamic month of Muharram, days after Pakistan's top court denied the party reserved parliamentary seats for minorities and women.
Khan's party has frequently held protests in recent years, demanding a probe into Feb. 2024 election results and the release of Khan, who has been jailed for nearly two years. His sons live in the UK and have not visited Pakistan in years, facing criticism by Khan opponents for not joining demonstrations for their father's release, which his party was calling supporters from all over the nation to join.
Khan's sister, Aleema Khan, told reporters in Rawalpindi on Tuesday that his sons, Sulaiman and Kasim, had decided to travel from the United Kingdom (UK) to the US and would eventually arrive in Pakistan to play their role in the PTI's protest campaign against the government.
'Firstly, they are going to America and they're telling all their friends, 'And we will go and tell them [US administration] about the human rights [situation] and what injustice is being done to their father [in Pakistan]',' Aleema said.
'Secondly, Sulaiman [and] Qasim have said, 'After that, we will come to Pakistan.' And they want to play their part in the [protest] movement.'
This is not the first time Khan's sons have spoken about Pakistan's domestic politics and their father, who has been in jail on corruption and other charges.
In a rare interview with business influencer and citizen journalist Mario Nawfal in May, they had urged US President Donald Trump and the 'people of influence' around the world to help free their father from prison, speaking of alleged 'suppression of democracy' in Pakistan and a lack of basic facilities for Khan in his prison cell.
Khan's PTI has held frequent protests demanding his release and against the Pakistani government over what it says were rigged general elections in Feb. 2024 and a campaign to subdue PTI and its support base since Khan's ouster from the PM's office in April 2022.
Pakistani authorities deny the allegations and accuse the ex-premier and his party of leading violent anti-government protests in the past, particularly in May 2023 and Nov. 2024. Hundreds of PTI supporters were jailed after riots allegedly ordered by the party against the army on May 9, 2023, while the government says four troops were killed in protests in November last year to demand Khan's release. The PTI denies instigating followers to violence.
The PTI announced the latest round of protests after the Supreme Court's constitutional bench on June 27 ruled that the party was not entitled to reserved seats in the national and provincial assemblies, upholding an earlier verdict by the Peshawar High Court. The dispute arose after the PTI lost its electoral symbol ahead of the February 8, 2024 national polls and its candidates contested as independents.
Despite PTI-backed candidates winning the most general seats, the party was denied reserved seats for women and minorities, which are allocated to political parties based on proportional representation, by the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP).
The government lost its two-thirds majority in parliament in July 2024 when the top court reversed the ECP's decision, terming it unconstitutional and ordering the reserved seats to be allocated to PTI. The ECP and the political parties had filed review petitions, which were accepted by the top court last week.
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