City
Epaper

Pakistan: 8 MNAs of Imran Khan party ready to quit as opposition plans to bring no-trust motion against ruling PTI

By ANI | Updated: February 28, 2022 20:35 IST

A total of eight members of the National Assembly (MNAs) of ruling Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) are ready to quit the party amid opposition's plans to bring a no-trust move against the Imran Khan government in Parliament.

Open in App

A total of eight members of the National Assembly (MNAs) of ruling Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) are ready to quit the party amid opposition's plans to bring a no-trust move against the Imran Khan government in Parliament.

These MNAs confirmed that they would contest the next election on a Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) ticket.

The lawmakers include Nasrullah Ghuman, Asim Nazeer, Nawab Sher Wassan, Raja Riaz, Riyaz Fatyana, Khurram Shehzad, Ghulam Bibi Bharwana, and Ghulam Mohammad Lali, the sources revealed, reported ARY News.

There is however a bone of contention between PML-N and Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) over the no-trust motion. On one hand, PML-N says it wanted completion of the parliamentary year but on the other hand PPP is demanding fresh polls to be called after the no-trust move.

According to the sources, PML-N said that PPP will bring its candidate for prime minister if it wanted to complete the parliamentary year.

PPP workers and supporters on Sunday began a long march from Karachi towards Islamabad, in protest against the Imran Khan government and demonstrate that it had lost the country's trust, local media reported.

The march, led by PPP chairman Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari was held to protest against the "weakened and unjust" PTI government and its wrong policies.

Calling for a nationwide unified movement of all opposition parties to oust the Imran Khan government, Bilawal raised a 38-point charter of demands in the march in which the participants, including women and children, called for a "final push" against the PTI regime.

The long march is the "beginning" of the end of Imran Khan's rule through a "no-trust move" in the parliament, the publication reported quoting Bilawal.

"This storm of public anger against Niazi (Imran Khan) and his government is just the beginning of what lies ahead. From now onwards for the next 10 days, people from across the country would send him messages of their sentiments and make the countdown," he said, according to the media outlet.

Enumerating the wrong policies of the Imran Khan government, Bilawal said that the PTI regime "seeks to divide, polarise and sabotage" and the people need to unite against the "criminal regime and end this reign of misrule and injustice".

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Nasrullah ghumanAsim nazeerislamabadKarachiNational AssemblyPTILower house of the national assemblyNational assembly of cambodiaFrench national assemblyKarachi companyAu assembly
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalPakistan Court Sentences Former PM Imran Khan and Wife Bushra Bibi to 17 Years in Toshakhana-II Corruption Case

InternationalImran Khan’s Sisters Stage Protest Outside Adiala Jail; Raise Alarm Over His Health, Security

InternationalImran Khan Facing “Mental Torture” in Jail, Claims Sister Uzma Khanum

InternationalImran Khan Dead? PTI Supporters and Former Pak PM's Sisters Reach Adiala Jail, Clash With Police

NationalIslamabad Car Blast: At Least 12 Killed After Vehicle Explodes in G-11 Sector of Pakistan

International Realted Stories

InternationalNine killed in 'random' mass shooting in South Africa

InternationalSouth Africa Mass Shooting: 10 Killed, Several Injured in Bekkersdal Firing; Attackers at Large

InternationalHong Kong police arrest mainland Chinese man in 6.4 million dollar money exchange Robbery

InternationalPakistan's infrastructure fails as winter rain paralyzes Balochistan, two killed

InternationalSheikh Mujibur hall at Dhaka University renamed after radical leader Hadi on students' 'verdict'