Ex-PM Khan’s party vows to use ‘all means’ to force early elections in Pakistan

Supporters of former Pakistan's Prime Minister Imran Khan attend an anti-government rally in Rawalpindi, Pakistan, on November 26, 2022. (AFP)
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Updated 21 December 2022
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Ex-PM Khan’s party vows to use ‘all means’ to force early elections in Pakistan

  • PTI leader Asad Umar says security situation deteriorating in KP province but targeted operations underway
  • Says Khan never said Pakistan would sever its diplomatic relations with US if his party came to power

ISLAMABAD: Former premier Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party vowed on Wednesday to continue protesting in different forms to pressure the coalition government of Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif to announce early elections.

Since his ouster from power in April through a parliamentary vote of no-confidence, Khan has been holding public rallies and sit-ins to pressure the government to announce fresh polls. PM Sharif has rejected Khan’s demand multiple times, saying general elections would be held in time as per schedule in October next year after the completion of the five-year term of the national and provincial assemblies.

“We have used all lawful and constitutional means to resist this government, and will continue doing so till the last date,” PTI secretary-general Asad Umar said at a briefing with international correspondents in Islamabad.

“The forms of our protests keep changing, so I cannot tell you for sure what we will be doing as a next step, but I can tell you with certainty that this will continue.”




Leader of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party of Prime Minister Imran Khan, Asad Umar (R) speaks with the media outside the Supreme Court building in Islamabad, Pakistan, on April 6, 2022. (AFP/File)

Khan’s campaign for snap polls and his standoff with the government since being ousted from power has heightened political uncertainty in the South Asian nation even as it struggles to stave off financial default.

Umar said that given the worsening financial crisis in the country, it was to his party’s advantage if the government completed its terms.

“We will be even better off politically in the next three months [if government completes its term], but it is going to be bad for the country,” he said. “The country will get economically weaker and land into a dangerous territory if this setup continues.”

Speaking about a rise in militancy in the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province where the PTI is in power, Umar admitted the security situation was deteriorating and some of the districts were in ‘serious problem.’ However, he added that targeted military operations were already underway in different parts of the province to flush out militants and the situation would improve soon. 

“Pakistan is slipping into a chaos with every passing day, and that’s why we are urging the government to call fresh elections, so that a new elected government could deal with all these issues,” he said.

On Khan’s threat to dissolve two provincial assemblies, in KP and Balochistan, Umar said the PTI was committed to the decision to force the government to call early polls.

Punjab, controlled by Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party, is the country’s most populous province and makes up nearly half of the country’s population of 220 million. 

The dissolutions could create a fresh constitutional crisis in the country.

Historically, polls for the federal and provincial governments are held at the same time in a general election every five years. If the two provincial assemblies are dissolved earlier, separate polls would have to be held for them within 90 days, which could throw up legal problems.

Umar expressed concern that the Sharif government would use growing militancy in KP as a “pretext” to delay the elections.

“If the KP assembly is dissolved, they [Sharif government] may use militancy as an excuse to delay the elections. Yes, there are chances of it,” he said.

About Pak-US relations, he said Khan had never said Pakistan would sever diplomatic relations with the United States if his party came to power.

Khan has blamed his removal on a regime change conspiracy by the US, which Washington denies.

“Imran Khan has never said we won’t have any diplomatic relations with the US,” Umar said, “but if the US or any country interferes in Pakistan’s domestic politics or policy decisions, then it is not acceptable.”


Pakistan, Oman navies discuss maritime security, ink agreement to share shipping data

Updated 24 December 2025
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Pakistan, Oman navies discuss maritime security, ink agreement to share shipping data

  • Visiting Oman royal navy commander calls on Pakistan Naval Chief Admiral Naveed Ashraf in Islamabad
  • White shipping agreement refers to exchange of prior information on movement of commercial ships

ISLAMABAD: The naval commanders of Pakistan and Oman discussed regional maritime security on Wednesday and signed an agreement to share shipping information with each other, the Pakistan Navy said in a statement.

The press release followed a meeting between Pakistan Naval Chief Admiral Naveed Ashraf and the visiting Oman Royal Navy Commander Rear Admiral Saif Bin Nasser Bin Mohsin Al Rahbi at Naval Headquarters in Islamabad.

Both navies maintain close professional relations, reflected in expert-level staff talks, joint training, bilateral exercises, and participation in multilateral exercises between the Pakistan Navy and the Royal Navy of Oman.

“During the meeting, matters of mutual interest, regional maritime security and bilateral naval cooperation were discussed,” the Pakistan Navy said.

The MoU was signed by both sides at a ceremony at the Naval Headquarters, the navy’s media wing confirmed. 

“The MoU is aimed at establishing of guidelines and procedures for information sharing in order to enhance mutual awareness of white shipping,” the Pakistan Navy said in a statement. 

White shipping agreement refers to the exchange of prior information on the movement and identity of commercial non-military merchant vessels.

Information regarding the identity of vessels helps countries tackle potential threats from sea routes. This particularly helps in the development of a proper regional maritime domain awareness

The statement said Al Rahbi lauded Pakistan Navy’s professionalism and acknowledged its ongoing contributions to maritime security and regional stability.

Pakistan and Oman share geographical proximity and common maritime boundaries. Bilateral relations between the two brotherly countries span a wide range of areas, including economic cooperation, people-to-people contacts and strong defense ties.

In December, a Royal Navy flotilla from Oman visited Karachi to take part in the annual bilateral Thamar Al Tayyib (TAT) 2025 exercise. 

Pakistan Navy and the Royal Navy of Oman have been conducting the TAT series of exercises regularly since 1980.