LAHORE: Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf Chairperson Imran Khan said on Wednesday that looters have been imposed on the country through a US conspiracy of regime change
Speaking at the Aiwan-e-Iqbal on the request of Lahore Bar Association, the former prime minister said that his party will never accept slavery of anyone. “We reject the imported government,” he said. “Lawyers made Pakistan Movement successful. This government will use all its tactic to stop us, we need lawyers to stop them.”
The PTI chairman said that peaceful protest is his party’s democratic right, adding that everyone should participate in the long march. He alleged that PM Shehbaz is ending his cases through his influence on FIA.
PM Shehbaz and Hamza are facing money laundering cases of as many as Rs24 billion, he alleged. “My movement is not political. I am calling for Jihad for this country,” he said. “A country will never be prosperous until and unless it has rule of law.”
Earlier in a public rally at Faisalabad, Imran Khan has said that no one was punished in the country whenever any prime minister and president including Liaquat Ali Khan, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, Ziaul Haq and Benazir Bhutto had been killed.
Khan said that if anything happened to him (if he were killed), the Pakistani nation must seek justice on his behalf.
He said this while speaking to a mammoth public gathering in Faisalabad on Sunday.
Imran Khan addressing a rally in Sialkot on Thursday had said that he had recorded a video of the characters behind the “conspiracy” against his government, and if something happens to him, it will be released.
“We will bring all people named in the video to justice one by one,” vowed the former prime minister.
Imran said that he knows about a poisonous substance that leads to cardiac arrest if it is included in the meal. “If something happens to me, the Pakistanis will seek justice for me and the country.”
He asked the nation not to accept the slavery of anyone.
Seeing the sentiments and emotions of Faisalabad’s people, he said that he was seeing becoming a new Pakistan as the Quaid-e-Azam dreamt of it.
He asked the government whether it was capable of taking care of the prevailing situation, referring to the rising price of the dollar against the Pakistani rupee and the ensuing inflation in the country.

















