Pakistan

Pakistan: Over 100 workers of Imran Khan’s party arrested in Lahore

"They picked up over 100 party supporters to block the workers' convention scheduled in the evening the same day," it said in a statement.

Lahore: More than 100 workers of Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party have been arrested here in Pakistan’s Punjab province to stop them from holding a rally to express solidarity with their jailed leader.

The party alleged that Punjab police personnel entered the residences of PTI workers in Kahna area without warrants on Sunday and “harassed the men, women and children”.

“They picked up over 100 party supporters to block the workers’ convention scheduled in the evening the same day,” it said in a statement.

The party said it was holding the convention after obtaining formal permission from the district administration to express solidarity with former prime minister and PTI chief Khan who has been in Adiala Jail Rawalpindi in the cipher case.

Khan, 71, was indicted in the cipher case on Monday. In a statement on Monday, the Lahore police said they arrested the PTI workers as they did not have permission from the police station concerned to hold the rally.

However, the PTI said the police crackdown on its workers was launched as the convention was to be held in the constituency of PML-N president and former prime minister Shehbaz Sharif, who is “the de facto chief minister of Punjab province”.

The party alleged that the police crackdown on its activists has come in sharp contrast to the PML-N rally on Saturday, which was openly facilitated by the state machinery to greet the homecoming of its supremo Nawaz Sharif from London after four years of self-exile. Nawaz, 73, is a court absconder and a convict in a corruption case.

Lambasting the caretaker government, PTI Secretary General Omar Ayub Khan posted on X, “One country, two systems.

This post was last modified on October 23, 2023 8:30 pm

Share
Press Trust of India

Press Trust of India (PTI) is India’s premier news agency, having a reach as vast as the Indian Railways. It employs more than 400 journalists and 500 stringers to cover almost every district and small town in India.

Load more...