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Pak ex-PM calls for march on May 25, seeks fresh elections

Khan said he wants people from all walks of life to participate in the march to raise clamour against his removal as the prime minister which he called as “illegal”.

Pak ex-PM calls for march on May 25, seeks fresh elections
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Pakistan's ex-PM Imran Khan

PESHAWAR: Pakistan’s ousted Prime Minister Imran Khan on Sunday asked his supporters to march peacefully to Islamabad on May 25 to press for the dissolution of the National Assembly and fresh elections in the country.

Khan, 69, who served as prime minister for over three and half years, was removed from the position through a no-confidence vote in parliament by the Opposition parties last month. Since his removal, Khan has addressed several rallies in different cities.

Addressing a press conference after his party's core committee meeting in Peshawar, Khan said the march would convert into a sit-in and continue until his demands are accepted, the Dawn newspaper reported. “The main demands for the march to the capital were the immediate dissolution of the National Assembly and a date for the next general election,” he said during the press conference.

Khan said he wants people from all walks of life to participate in the march to raise clamour against his removal as the prime minister which he called as “illegal”.

''On the 25th [of May] I will meet you in Islamabad on the Srinagar Highway. I want people from all [walks of life] to come because this is Jihad, and not politics. I've decided and told all my team that we have to be ready to sacrifice our lives,'' Khan said.

After his removal, he embarked on a whirlwind tour of the major cities and addressed big rallies to sell his theory of removal, apparently convincing his support base that he was a victim and should be brought back to power with a clear mandate to run the country and end its problems.

Khan has accused the US of conspiring to topple his elected government, citing communication from the country’s ambassador in Washington.

The US government has bluntly denied the allegations multiple times. Meanwhile, Interior Minister Rana Sanaullah on Sunday warned the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) of action if its protesters were to march towards Islamabad with the ''intent to cause anarchy.'' Addressing a press conference in Bahawalpur in Punjab province, Sanaullah said the government and its allies were mandated to decide about the line of action against the PTI's planned long march to Islamabad.

''I don't know what decision the leaders of the coalition government will take, but if they decide [to go for] action, then we will not allow protesters to even come out of their homes,'' the minister told the media.

The interior minister was also dismissive of the PTI's march, saying that it would not be much of a bother for the government.

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