Followers double down on support as ex-PM Khan's party announces nationwide protests today

Supporters of former Pakistani prime minister Imran Khan, take part in a protest as they block the main road a day after the assassination attempt on Khan,in Peshawar on November 4, 2022. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 05 November 2022
Follow

Followers double down on support as ex-PM Khan's party announces nationwide protests today

  • Khan was injured in a gun attack in Wazirabad city on Thursday as he led supporters to Islamabad 
  • The ex-premier has blamed the hit on PM Sharif, interior minister and ISI counterintelligence chief 

ISLAMABAD/LAHORE: Former Pakistan prime minister Imran Khan’s party has announced countrywide protests on Saturday against a gun attack on him, a senior party leader said, hours after the ex-premier postponed his anti-government march on Islamabad. 

Khan was shot in the leg on Thursday as he waved to crowds from a container mounted on a truck from where he was leading a protest march on the capital to press for early elections and calling for the resignation of PM Shehbaz Sharif. 

Khan, who was ousted in a parliamentary vote of confidence in April, told supporters from a hospital on Friday he would resume his march to Islamabad after recovering from the “assassination” attempt. 

While Khan supporters staged protests and blocked roads in major cities on Friday, his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party said it had planned demonstrations across the country on Saturday evening. 

“There will be protest gatherings in all the cities of Pakistan tomorrow at 5 o’clock. The protest site of each city will be announced by local [party] chapters,” Asad Umar, a close Khan aide, said on Twitter. 

“Show them that no one can suppress a truly free nation. I myself will participate in the protest at Liberty Chowk, Lahore.” 

 

 

Arab News spoke to a number of Khan supporters in Lahore on Friday and they said they would not back off on their demands. 

“There are a lot of fighters here, your prisons are few,” rhymed Zafar Mehmood Bhatti, a Khan supporter. 

“This tear gas, these bullets, these batons are nothing, tyrant. To kill us, you have very few weapons.” 

Qamar Cheema said there was nothing more important than Khan for them and so was he their “red line.” 

“He is the only leader who is right for Pakistan’s welfare, permanence and its progress,” she told Arab News. 

“There are no leaders like him, all others are corrupt. None have so far proved good for Pakistan.” 

Aneesa Siddiqui said their march would definitely go on and, God willing, it would conclude in Islamabad. 

“We will not call off the march till the government doesn’t announce elections,” she said. 

Khan has accused three people of devising the plan to assassinate him and named PM Sharif, Interior Minister Rana Sanaullah and intelligence official Maj. Gen. Faisal Naseer. 

The ex-premier has not provided evidence to support his claim. 

The Pakistani military’s media wing, the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), called the allegations “baseless and irresponsible.” 

“The government of Pakistan has been requested to investigate the matter and initiate legal action against those responsible for defamation and false accusations against the institution and its officials without any evidence whatsoever,” the ISPR said in a statement Friday. 

Sanaullah has also rejected the allegations, while PM Sharif condemned the attack on Khan and ordered an investigation. 


11 killed, at least 60 missing after huge Karachi shopping plaza blaze

Updated 7 sec ago
Follow

11 killed, at least 60 missing after huge Karachi shopping plaza blaze

  • Videos showed flames rising as firefighters labored through Sunday night to stop fire that started on Saturday 
  • Firefighters said lack of ventilation in the ‌mall caused the building to ‌fill ⁠with ​smoke ‌and slowed rescue efforts

ISLAMABAD: The provincial government of Sindh has ordered an official inquiry after a fire at a major shopping plaza in the port city of Karachi killed 11 people and destroyed more than 1,200 shops, officials said on Monday, dealing a severe blow to one of the city’s busiest commercial districts.

The blaze broke out late Saturday at Gul Plaza in Karachi’s Saddar business area and spread rapidly through multiple floors, according to emergency officials. Firefighters battled flames for hours to bring the fire under control, which was still blazing late into Sunday night.

Deadly fires in commercial buildings are a recurring problem in Karachi, a city of more than 20 million people, where overcrowding, outdated infrastructure and weak enforcement of fire safety regulations have repeatedly resulted in mass casualties and economic losses.

“Karachi fire death toll rises to 11,” said Chief Police Surgeon for Karachi Dr. Summaiya Syed Tariq.

“The fire has been extinguished but light smoke is still rising and the recovery of bodies has now begun,” says Muhamamd Amin, an official of Edhi present on the spot.

Taking notice of the incident, Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah on Sunday evening directed the Karachi commissioner to launch an immediate inquiry and examine whether safety failures or regulatory lapses contributed to the scale of the disaster.

“Fire safety arrangements in the building must be checked, and strict action should be taken against those responsible if negligence or carelessness is proven,” Shah said in a statement.

The cause of the fire has not yet been determined. Police said a formal investigation would begin once firefighting operations were fully completed.

Officials briefed the chief minister that more than 1,200 shops were gutted in the fire, wiping out inventories and investments built over decades.

Firefighting operations managed to bring 60 to 70 percent of the blaze under control, while rescue and cooling operations continued well into Sunday. One firefighter was among the six who died.

Speaking to reporters later on Sunday, Shah provided new details on the scale and timeline of the emergency response, saying municipal authorities acted within minutes of receiving the alert.

“The first fire tender reached the site at 10:27 p.m. and firefighting operations began immediately,” the chief minister said, adding that at least 26 fire tenders, four snorkel vehicles and 10 water bowzers were deployed, with additional support provided by the Pakistan Navy and the Civil Aviation Authority.

Shah said preliminary information indicated that 58 to 60 people were initially reported missing after the blaze, though rescue and cooling operations were still underway and authorities were continuing to verify the figures. He added that the fire occurred during the peak wedding shopping season, compounding losses for traders and shoppers in the area.

He said the intensity of the blaze and limited access points inside the building made it difficult for firefighters to enter quickly, contributing to the scale of damage.

$10 MILLION LOSSES

The fire tragedy has also triggered urgent concern within Karachi’s business community.

The Karachi Chamber of Commerce and Industry (KCCI) announced the formation of a dedicated committee to coordinate relief efforts, document losses and press the government for compensation and rehabilitation of affected traders.

KCCI said preliminary assessments showed that over 1,000 small and medium-sized businesses had been completely destroyed, leaving many families without income. The chamber appealed to both provincial and federal authorities to announce a special compensation package, citing precedents such as the 2009 Bolton Market arson, after which funds were approved to rebuild fire-hit markets and compensate nearly 2,000 affectees.

Ateeq Mir, a traders’ representative, estimated that losses to businesses from the fire would be over $10 million. 

“There is no compensation for life but we will try our best that the small businessmen that have encountered losses here, we will try in a transparent manner … to compensate their losses,” Chief Minister Shah told reporters.

Separately, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif held a telephone conversation with Shah on Sunday evening, the premier’s office said, to offer full federal support to provincial authorities.

Sharif said a “coordinated and effective system is essential” to control fires quickly in densely populated urban areas and stressed the need for stronger preventive mechanisms to avert similar tragedies in the future. He said the federal government was prepared to work with provincial authorities to help establish an integrated fire-response and safety framework, adding that Islamabad stood with the affected families and the Sindh government during the crisis.

Battling large fires in Karachi’s dense commercial districts is notoriously difficult, reflecting a mix of urban congestion, weak regulation, and chronic enforcement failures. Many markets and plazas are built with narrow access points, encroachments and illegal extensions that block fire tenders and delay rescue operations, while buildings often lack functional fire exits, sprinklers or alarm systems. 

Although safety regulations exist on paper, inspections are sporadic, and penalties rarely enforced, allowing hazardous electrical wiring, overloaded circuits and flammable materials to go unchecked. In such tightly packed areas, fires can spread rapidly from shop to shop and floor to floor, leaving firefighters little room to maneuver and sharply increasing the risk to both occupants and emergency crews.