Pakistan’s ousted PM nominates seven-member negotiating committee as government rules out talks

Former Pakistan's Prime Minister Imran Khan speaks during an interview at his residence in Lahore on May 18, 2023. (Photo courtesy: AFP)
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Updated 27 May 2023
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Pakistan’s ousted PM nominates seven-member negotiating committee as government rules out talks

  • The ex-premier offered to negotiate with state authorities on Friday, as a massive crackdown against his party continued
  • Khan’s PTI suffered another blow as founding PTI leaders, Ali Zaidi and Imran Ismail, announced to quit and leave politics

ISLAMABAD: Former prime minister Imran Khan on Saturday announced a seven-member committee to negotiate with the government shortly after a senior cabinet member of the ruling coalition ruled out talks with him amid continuing exodus of founding leaders of his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party.

Khan embroiled himself in a bitter rivalry with the army and Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s government after his ouster from power in a parliamentary vote of no-confidence last year which he blamed on a “foreign conspiracy” implemented by his political rivals and top generals.

Tensions intensified further after he was arrested by paramilitary Rangers on the instructions of the country’s anti-graft body on May 9, leading to violent protests in which several government buildings and military installations were torched by people carrying PTI flags.

The former prime minister made an offer to negotiate with state authorities on Friday amid a massive crackdown on his party, as several PTI supporters were arrested and many of its leaders were announcing to leave.

“On the instructions of PTI chairman Imran Khan, a negotiating team has been formed for talks with the government,” the PTI announced on Twitter. “A notification has been issued in the name of all seven people included in the negotiating team.”

The social media post added the PTI team would discuss a plan of action with the government regarding the forthcoming elections in the country.

It said the committee would include former ministers, Shah Mahmood Qureshi, Pervez Khattak, Murad Saeed, Hamad Azhar, along with the ex-speaker of the National Assembly, Asad Qaiser, among others.

Most of the people named in the committee are either in the custody of law enforcement agencies since the May 9 violence or staying underground to avoid arrest.

It is also not clear how the negotiating team will engage the government after information minister Mariyam Aurangzeb ruled out talks with those “who attacked sensitive installations and buildings which were symbols of national pride” and “poisoned the minds of the youth.”

“Imran [Khan] was not ready to sit with the opposition parties on critical issues [during his tenure in power],” she said in an official handout.

The minister’s statement was issued as some of the founding PTI leaders, including the party president in Sindh, Ali Zaidi, and former governor of the same province, Imran Ismail, announced to quit the party.

Both leaders condemned the May 9 violence in their statements.




Ex-Pakistan prime minister Imran Khan's aide and former governor of Sindh province Imran Ismail gestures during a news conference in Karachi on May 27, 2023. (AN Photo)

“I am not sure if I will continue to stay in politics or not,” said Ismail during a news conference at the Karachi Press Club.

Zaidi, who served as the minister of ports and shipping in Khan’s administration, said the violent protests against the military were “wrong,” adding that Pakistani citizens slept peacefully at night since their soldiers were there to protect the borders.

“After much deliberation, I have decided to quit politics,” he continued. “I will also resign from the positions I hold within the party.”

Amid the ongoing political situation, the government also revoked the diplomatic passports issued to top PTI leaders, including former federal ministers Qureshi, Khattak and Asad Umar.


Pakistan president in Bahrain to boost trade, defense and security ties

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Pakistan president in Bahrain to boost trade, defense and security ties

  • Asif Ali Zardari will meet Bahrain’s king and crown prince, discuss regional issues of mutual interest
  • Trade volume between Pakistan and Bahrain has increased from $500 million to $1 billion in recent years

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari arrived in Bahrain late Tuesday on a four-day visit to enhance bilateral cooperation in trade, defense and security, Pakistani state media reported.

Pakistan and Bahrain have maintained close diplomatic, trade, investment and defense relations and have lately been focusing on strengthening their cooperation in key economic sectors.

The Pakistan president’s visit will be focused on bilateral, regional and international issues of mutual interest for both nations, according to the foreign office in Islamabad.

He will hold talks with King Hamad bin Isa Al-Khalifa and Crown Prince Salman bin Hamad, and address a reception held at the headquarters of the Economic Development Board in Manama.

“The visit seeks to reinforce Pakistan’s longstanding cooperation with the brotherly Gulf nation while expanding opportunities for collaboration in trade and economic partnership, defense and security and people-to-people ties,” the Radio Pakistan broadcaster said.

Islamabad and Manama established diplomatic ties in 1971. In recent years, the bilateral trade volume between the two countries has ranged between $500 million to around $1 billion, according to Pakistan’s foreign ministry.

Major exports from Pakistan to Bahrain include meat, vegetables, rice, tobacco and textile. Imports from Bahrain, on the other hand, include petroleum products, ferrous wastes and scrape and aluminum.

Both have established a Joint Ministerial Commission (JMC) at the level of foreign ministers to discuss trade and economic ties, take decisions mutually and supervise the implementation of these decisions. So far, only two sessions of the JMC have been held and the last one was held in Bahrain in July 2021.

Zardari’s visit takes place amid increasing economic engagement between the two nations following the Pakistan-Bahrain Investment Summit in May 2025. Both sides signed contracts worth $13 million during the summit.