PTI rules out talks with govt, establishment ahead of Nov 24 protest

PTI spokesperson Sheikh Waqas Akram says workers will not return until goals are accomplished

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Supporters of Imran Khan sit on scaffoldings in Rawalpindi, on November 26, 2022. — Reuters
Supporters of Imran Khan sit on scaffoldings in Rawalpindi, on November 26, 2022. — Reuters
  • Asif nobody to say PTI people are compromised, says Akram.
  • MNA says Asif should be happy if PTI members compromised.
  • Rana Sana says PM offered PTI for having political dialogue.

Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) spokesperson Sheikh Waqas Akram said his party would not hold talks with the stakeholders prior to their planned countrywide demonstration on November 24.

"There is no possibility of negotiations with the government or the establishment before the protest," Akram said during an interview on Geo News' programme 'Naya Pakistan' on Sunday.

Last week, the incarcerated PTI founder, Imran Khan, called on his supporters to march to Islamabad on November 24.

"Imran Khan says this is the final call for a [anti-government] protest. The PTI founder has stressed that the party's entire leadership will be part of the march," said his lawyer Faisal Chaudhry following a meeting in Adiala Jail.

The protest would not only take place in Islamabad, but throughout Pakistan and across the world where Imran's supporters were present, said Chaudhry.

The party has made four demands — revoke the 26th Constitutional Amendment, restore democracy and constitution, return the public’s mandate, and release all "innocent political" prisoners.

The lawyer, Chaudhry said that the party founder had also formed a committee for the march and asked not to reveal the names of those who were part of it as Imran feared they would be arrested.

Khan has been behind bars since August 2023 after he was sentenced in the Toshakhana case and subsequently sentenced in other cases.

PTI spokesperson Sheikh Waqas Akram. —National Assembly website/ File
PTI spokesperson Sheikh Waqas Akram. —National Assembly website/ File

Moving on, 'Naya Pakistan' host Shahzad Iqbal quoted Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) leader Rana Sanaullah as saying that the PTI protest was no big deal for the government and the opposition party would reap no benefit from this.

In response, Akram said Sanaullah had earlier been saying that they would not be able to cross the Attock bridge but his party did. He also said the party workers would stay put there until the goals were accomplished.

"We will not leave (the protest venue) until the goals of the protest are achieved," he maintained.

To a query, he said Defence Minister Khawaja Asif was nobody to say that people of the PTI were compromised. If it was so, then he should be happy instead of worrying about it, he added.

Earlier, Sanaullah, who holds the portfolio of Special Assistant to Prime Minister on Political Affairs, in the same programme, said the PTI’s call was no challenge to the government.

He also said the opposition party gave call for the protest without doing homework and this call would backfire and cause the party an immense damage.

The prime minister offered the PTI for having a political dialogue, he said adding, but dialogue was not listed in the PTI founder’s politics.