Ex-PM Khan's party announces it will dissolve provincial assemblies after Saturday

This photograph taken on August 13, 2018 show Pakistani legislators taking oath during a session of the provincial assembly after the July 25 general election, in Peshawar. (AFP/File)
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Updated 28 November 2022
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Ex-PM Khan's party announces it will dissolve provincial assemblies after Saturday

  • Calls on new military leaders to review policy of carrying 'political dead bodies'
  • Pakistan appointed new army chief, chairman joint chiefs of staff committee last week

KARACHI: The Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party of former Prime Minister Imran Khan on Monday urged the country's new military leaders to review the policy of supporting the coalition government led by PM Shehbaz Sharif, announcing that the Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provincial assemblies would be dissolved after Saturday this week to pave the way for general elections.

Sharif last week named General Asim Munir as chief of Pakistan's army, an organisation that plays a hugely influential role in the governance of the nuclear-armed nation. Gen. Sahir Shamshad Mirza was appointed chairman of the joint chiefs of staff committee. 

The PTI has accused outgoing army chief General Qamar Bajwa, who retires tomorrow, Tuesday, of backing the coalition government and helping it come to power through a parliamentary vote of no-confidence that removed Khan from office in April. The army says it does not interfere in politics.

"There is a new dispensation [in the military]," close Khan aide Chaudhry Fawad Hussain said at a press conference after a meeting to deliberate on the PTI's recent announcement that its legislators would resign from the Punjab and Khyber Pakkhtunkhwa assemblies where the party is in majority. 

"The weight of the policies of the last seven months is bending you backwards," Hussain said, addressing the new military leaders. "Our establishment is carrying around the weight of Nawaz Sharif and Zardari's political dead bodies. You will not be able to carry this weight."

He was referring to Sharif's brother Nawaz, a former three time PM and head of the ruling Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz party, and former president Asif Ali Zardari, who heads the Pakistan Peoples Party. 

"Pakistan's public is expecting that you will change this policy and we will move forward."

At a rally on Saturday, Khan said he was consulting his party on the possibility of resigning from all provincial assemblies in a fresh bid to push for early elections. PTI has already resigned from the federal parliament, but remains in power in two provinces, Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, and two administrative units.

Speaking about Monday's meeting where the decision to resign from assemblies was discussed, Hussain said:

“The decision to dissolve both Punjab and Khyber Pakhunkhwa assemblies has been endorsed."

He said KP chief minister Mehmood Khan had already met Khan while Punjab CM Chaudhry Pervez Elahi would meet him on Tuesday.

"On Friday, a session of Punjab's parliamentary party [assembly] has been called and on Saturday a session has been called of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa [assembly]. After both sessions, these assemblies will be dissolved."

Speaking to Arab News, Hussain said the move to dissolve assemblies would force early elections, which has been Khan's main demand since April. 

“A large number of 568 seats will be vacated with dissolution of assemblies and resignations from national and two other provincial assemblies,” he said, adding that the government could not hold by-elections on so many seats. 


Pakistan calls for calm after 16 people killed in Khamenei protests

Updated 23 min 8 sec ago
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Pakistan calls for calm after 16 people killed in Khamenei protests

  • The violence came hours after Iranian authorities confirmed Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei was killed in coordinated US-Israeli strikes
  • Nine people were killed in clashes in Karachi where protesters stormed US consulate, while UN offices were set ablaze in Gilgit, Skardu

ISLAMABAD/KARACHI/GILGIT/PESHAWAR: Pakistan’s Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi on Sunday urged calm after at least 16 people were killed in protests linked to the killing of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in joint US-Israeli strikes.

Hundreds of protesters gathered outside the US consulate in Karachi on Sunday morning. Videos showed protesters armed with sticks smashing doors and windows. Separate footage appeared to show property inside the consulate premises set on fire, prompting police to fire tear gas at them.

In Islamabad, protesters entered the Red Zone which houses key government and diplomatic offices in the capital, prompting authorities to fire tear gas to disperse the demonstrators. Similarly, people gathered outside the press club in the northwestern city of Peshawar, from where they were marching toward the US consulate.

At least nine people were killed and 60 others sustained injuries in clashes with law enforcement outside the US consulate in Karachi, according to authorities. Seven more were killed in the northern Gilgit-Baltistan region, where clashes left 45 people injured.

Paramilitary soldiers and police officers walk past a burning police's armoured vehicle, which was set on fire by Shiite Muslims during a protest over the killing of Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, in Karachi, Pakistan, Sunday, March 1, 2026. (AFP)

“After the martyrdom of Ayatollah Khamenei, every citizen of Pakistan is saddened in the same way as the citizens of Iran are grieving,” Naqvi was quoted as saying by his ministry.

“We are all with you. We request the citizens not to take the law into their hands, and to record their protest peacefully.”

Naqvi visited different areas of Islamabad and reviewed the law-and-order situation, according to the interior ministry. He ordered foolproof security arrangements at the Diplomatic Enclave, which is home to foreign missions, in Islamabad’s Red Zone.

PROTESTERS STORM US CONSULATE IN KARACHI

Additional Inspector General Karachi Azad Khan told reporters that protesters had managed to enter the US consulate from the outer gate before police dispersed them.

“Nine people are dead while 39 injured are being treated at the Shaheed Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto Institute of Trauma,” Karachi Police surgeon Dr. Summaiya Syed said in a statement.

She said seven others were injured at the Jinnah Postgraduate Medical Center, among them five police personnel, while 14 others were receiving treatment for wounds at private hospitals in the city.

Separately, the Sindh provincial government expressed grief at the loss of lives in the clashes outside the US consulate in Karachi, saying it had constituted a high-level joint investigation committee (JIT) to carry out an impartial investigation into the incident.

“The JIT will determine the circumstances in which the incident occurred and what its causes were,” a statement by the provincial government said, adding that it respects the constitutional right of citizens to protest.

VIOLENCE IN GILGIT-BALTISTAN

In GB, protesters set fire to and vandalized several buildings, including United Nations (UN) regional offices, according to Shabbir Mir, who speaks for the GB chief minister. Religious leaders were trying to quell the protests.

“Seven people were killed and 45 were injured in today’s clashes in Gilgit,” Dr. Wajahat Hussain, a senior health official in Gilgit, told Arab News on Sunday.

Tufail Mir, a deputy inspector-general of police, told Arab News several people were injured in the Skardu district as well.

MIDDLE EAST TENSIONS

The violence came hours after Iranian authorities confirmed Khamenei was killed in coordinated strikes carried out by the US and Israel, dramatically escalating tensions in the Middle East and triggering protests in several countries.

Muslims chant anti U.S slogans during a rally to condemn the killing of Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, in Peshawar, Pakistan, Sunday, March 1, 2026. (AFP)

According to US officials, the operation targeted Revolutionary Guard command facilities, air defense systems, missile and drone launch sites, and military airfields. The US military said it suffered no casualties and reported minimal damage to its bases despite what it described as “hundreds of Iranian missile and drone attacks.”

Iran retaliated by launching missiles and drones toward Israel and targeting US military installations in Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar and the UAE. The Emirati government said its air defense systems intercepted dozens of Iranian missiles and drones, but debris from the interceptions caused material damage in Abu Dhabi and Dubai, and at least one civilian, a Pakistani national, was killed. It issued rare emergency alerts urging residents to seek shelter, underscoring how the conflict has rippled far beyond Iran’s borders. 

The Israeli military said dozens of Iranian missiles were fired toward Israeli territory, many of which were intercepted. Israel’s Magen David Adom rescue service said a woman in the Tel Aviv area died after being wounded in a missile strike.