Pakistan could hold early elections, interior minister says as PM calls March 27 rally

Pakistan's interior minister Sheikh Rasheed Ahmed speaks to media in Lahore, Pakistan, on March 24, 2022. (PID)
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Updated 24 March 2022
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Pakistan could hold early elections, interior minister says as PM calls March 27 rally

  • Parliament will convene on Friday to start proceedings into no-confidence motion against PM Khan
  • Motion could take seven days to go for voting to decide whether Khan will be removed

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani interior minister Sheikh Rashid Ahmed said on Thursday there was a chance of early elections in the country as parliament is expected to vote later this month in a no-confidence move against Prime Minister Imran Khan.
Pakistan’s parliament will convene on Friday to start proceedings into the no-confidence motion which could take seven days to go for voting to decide whether Khan will be removed.
Opposition parties filed the motion on March 8, saying Khan has lost his parliamentary majority after some 20 of his party lawmakers defected, calling on the prime minister to step down. The opposition accuses Khan of mismanagement of the economy and bad governance.
Before the opposition filed the no-trust request in parliament, several senior opposition leaders had called for Khan to announce early elections, a demand his ruling Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf has repeatedly rejected.
“Pakistan could hold early elections,” Ahmed told reporters in a surprise statement in Islamabad. “Everyday, things are getting better,” he added in what was seen as a reference to risks of constitutional, administrative and economic crises in Pakistan over the no-confidence vote.
In a pre-recorded video message to the nation on Thursday, PM Khan invited Pakistanis to attend a rally in support of his government, scheduled to be held in the capital on March 27, saying the Qur’an had ordered Muslims to stand with the “good against evil.”
Khan last week announced he would hold a “one-million” strong rally ahead of the parliamentary no-confidence vote.
The date for the vote has not yet been set but Khan’s government and the opposition have both announced rallies in Islamabad ahead of the event.
“I want the whole nation to come out with me on March 27 to give one message: that we are not with wrong,” Khan said in the video message. “Allah has ordered in the Qur’an … that Muslims stand with the good, and stand against wrongdoing and evil, this is how society stays alive.”




Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan addresses his supporters in a pre-recorded video message in Islamabad, Pakistan, on March 24, 2022. (Screengrab from the video message)

He called the opposition a “gang of thieves” and said they had tried to buy the “conscience” of lawmakers, referring to legislators from his party who have openly announced they will vote against Khan and members of allied parties who have publicly spoken against his policies recently.
On Wednesday, Khan told journalists he would not resign in the face of the no-confidence motion: “My prediction is that we will win the no-confidence match.”
The opposition needs the support of 172 lawmakers in the country’s 342-member National Assembly for the no-trust vote to prevail. The ruling Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party has accused the opposition of bribing its lawmakers to vote against Khan.
The government now hopes it can get defecting lawmakers disqualified through a court ruling, making it difficult for the opposition to secure a simple majority to bring it down.
The opposition says it has the required numbers to win the no-trust vote, though its leaders are still holding meetings with the government’s allied parties to convince them to abandon the coalition.


Police rescue 11 abducted bus passengers after gunbattle in Pakistan’s katcha region

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Police rescue 11 abducted bus passengers after gunbattle in Pakistan’s katcha region

  • The passengers were seized when gunmen intercepted a bus traveling on a key highway linking Punjab to Balochistan
  • Authorities deployed armored vehicles, surveillance drones as dense fog complicated the rescue operation in the area

KARACHI: Pakistani police on Tuesday rescued 11 bus passengers who were abducted by an organized criminal gang, known locally as katcha dacoits, from near the border separating the provinces of Sindh and Balochistan, officials said.

The passengers were seized on Monday night when gunmen intercepted the bus traveling on the Ghotki–Guddu–Kashmore Link Road, a strategic highway in the country’s south. The bus was en route from Sadiqabad in Punjab province to the Balochistan capital, Quetta.

The abduction occurred in the marshy area of Ghotki, a riverine territory known as the katcha region along the Indus River, long regarded as a sanctuary for heavily armed criminal gangs.

“After a police encounter with the bandits, 11 abducted passengers have been recovered,” Ghotki district police chief Anwar Khetran told media.

He added an exchange of fire erupted near Sonmiani village during the large-scale police operation. Two of the rescued passengers sustained injuries and were taken to a nearby hospital for treatment.

It was not known how many passengers were aboard the bus when dacoits abducted it.

Authorities said a heavy police contingent using armored vehicles and surveillance drones was deployed and that the operation would continue until all perpetrators were captured or killed. However, Khetran noted that dense fog was hampering visibility.

The incident is the latest in a string of high-profile abductions targeting travelers in the difficult-to-govern katcha areas of Upper Sindh, particularly in the Ghotki, Kashmore and Shikarpur districts.

Despite periodic crackdowns involving police and paramilitary forces, criminal gangs operating in the rugged terrain have persisted, posing a continuing challenge to law and order.