PTI news, updates and discussions part ll

Bro come on. Don’t make such idiotic statements, don’t compare some politicians to the grandson of the prophet
Unfortunately, as you go into personality worship so you shall do. But the analogy is fine.
I remember a senior PTI leader coming on drunk to a TV show and saying "Allah ke baad koi hai Pakistan ke liye woh Imran Khan hai"..
 
In literature, a simile is often used
no sorry comparing and using the greatest tragedy in our religions history for petty politics is not okay
u guys are the same people that get worked up when fujeets use religious langauge in their propganda , so pls dont do the same shit
 
Last edited:
no sorry comparing and using the greatest tragedy in our religons history for petty politics is not okay
u guys are the same people that get worked up when fujeets use religious langauge in their propganda , so pls dont do the same shit
Cultism is cultism - and to that every hypocrisy is justifiable. The establishment does it for theirs , PPPP for theirs and these ones for theirs.

Interesingly, IK looks to be in decent shape compared to the picture painted of him by PTI trolls of being Davy Jones with one eye. If anything, Salman Raja visited IK recently and he is pretty good health and able to get most of his routine in.

That doesn't absolve the establishment of their idiocy in political prisoner keeping but that also doesn't mean IK's conditions are ANYWHERE comparable to what Mandela went through - and perhaps IK comes out a sharper and humbled individual who can eventually change the system with a long term vision rather than the egoistic idealism he kept being prone to.
 
Every anecdote I've ever heard of IK, in person from people who've met him or in media, it's clear that he has that 'My Way or The Highway' attitude his whole life. It's his biggest strength and weakness.

This has irked many people to no end. Understandable. It's a valid point that such a personality will always be terrible at politics especially when it comes to outreach and being a mediator. That's all fine. But I can argue that this is exactly the type of attitude you need to face faujis and the landed elite.

But as a whole he remains the best bet currently for (pipe dream, I know) civilian supremacy or at least reducing the role of Army and ISI in politics. His party is the only one that even tried to bring in new faces. Sohail Afridi kon hay? He's some bloody civilian who has been made chief minister of an entire province. Is he going to be any good? Probably not. He'll be mediocre at best but this is a huge step in the right direction. If this system is maintained and you have a proper grassroots political system, believe me you will get far better leaders than PMA can train. Look at any functioning country for proof of this.


The others don't even bother to hide their dynastic politics anymore. They openly say yes we're working with Fauj in a 'hybrid' system which is essentially a veiled martial law system where civilian dogs will take the fall for any mistake or shortcomings of generals who for some reason are interested in ANYTHING but commanding their units/wings/brigades/branches

He is the only running horse in a stable full of donkeys while we argue over whether he gallops fast enough or not.

Whether or not he's in decent shape in jail right now or he really did lose an eye is not the problem. He shouldn't be there in the first place! Everyone on this forum knows he didn't steal no bloody watch. Even the faujeets (who themselves are bloody civilians btw, IDK why they defend Fauj so hard ) know this in their heart.

I am not that great at articulating my thoughts but I'm just so tired of this age old myth pushed in Pakistan where you are only a patriot if you're in the Fauj or you're a ****. Any one else is just corrupt/chor/incompetent. Like those people aren't present in army too in great numbers and with NO oversight because they're on top of the food chain.
 
Unfortunately, as you go into personality worship so you shall do. But the analogy is fine.
I remember a senior PTI leader coming on drunk to a TV show and saying "Allah ke baad koi hai Pakistan ke liye woh Imran Khan hai"..


like that noonie who said with Nawaz sharif's arrival resulted in a new fragrance in Pakistan ?..


some people mistake breaking the wind as fragrance....
 
Last edited:
very anecdote I've ever heard of IK, in person from people who've met him or in media, it's clear that he has that 'My Way or The Highway' attitude his whole life. It's his biggest strength and weakness.

correct observation

this attitude stems from his history of his personal successes... whether graduating from top notch education like Oxford, establishing not one by two cancer hospitals, winning the World Cup, trophy bride etc he can rub the wrong way with people who are less accomplished. I still remember him talking down to an american CNN reporter ( I think) who said golf is hard game and he said nothing compared to cricket..

the point is his attitude of superiority can turn off people.. but some one who followed him for decades I realise he wants other Pakistanis to do the same ie not be losers... I mean seriously when you go around Pakistan how many "winners" do you actually see?.. in interview he was asked what was the most proud moment in his two years of power.."PAF pilots shooting down two indian planes'... why?.. it was extremely difficult what they achieved and they made Pakistan look like a winner.

the current tinpot just wants "the old Pakistan" to continue... run down, people with low esteem, no great objective in life, etc ie standard third world losers
 
Last edited:
The rapid consolidation of power by Field Marshal Asim Munir has the PTI reconsidering its options – and the controversial “charter of democracy.”

By Kunwar Khuldune Shahid
June 24, 2026

View attachment 203023

On June 19, the Election Commission Gilgit-Baltistan (ECGB) announced the final results of the June 7 polls, with the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) bagging nine out of 21 seats to emerge victorious. The delay in finalizing the result of the elections in Gilgit-Baltistan, a territory that is a part of the Kashmir dispute between Pakistan and India, was largely due to widespread allegations of misappropriation leveled by Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI).

The PTI insisted that, like the 2024 general elections, the Gilgit-Baltistan polls too were rigged by the military establishment to sideline the party. Eyewitnesses confirmed discrepancies in voting patterns and final results across polling stations, in addition to the pre-poll alterations in constituency boundaries and voters lists. On top of that, the PTI is being forced to field independent candidates, with its leaders frequently barred from campaigning.

The state’s marginalization of the PTI from the electoral process is a continuation of the military establishment’s clampdown on the party following Imran Khan’s removal as the prime minister in April 2022. Since then the party leadership has faced incarceration. Khan has been in prison since August 2023, in addition to thousands of PTI workers being jailed over “anti-state” actions – most notably the riots of May 9, 2023, when Khan was first arrested. Last year, 75 PTI leaders were jailed in a mass conviction over the 2023 protests.

Khan’s health is deteriorating in jail, as both the PTI founder and his wife Bushra Bibi – also imprisoned over corruption allegations – suffer from a loss of vision. Meanwhile, the media blackout of the party – especially Khan, whose name was unofficially barred from being spoken on TV channels – has continued over the past four years, including in the lead up to the Gilgit-Baltistan polls.

While anti-army sentiments exploded in Pakistan in the immediate aftermath of Khan’s removal as the premier, and garnered global attention amid large-scale election manipulation in 2024, the military leadership has witnessed a stark turnaround over the past 12 months. The ceasefire following the May 2025 India-Pakistan clashes allowed Islamabad to claim victory, especially amid confirmation that multiple Indian jets were downed.

Since then, as Pakistan has continued to woo U.S. President Donald Trump, Islamabad has become the chief broker in the ongoing Iran-U.S. negotiations, even hosting the talks between the two sides in April. The all-powerful army chief, Asim Munir, who became the country’s second field marshal and the very first chief of defense forces (CDF), was described by U.S. Vice President J.D. Vance as “one of two most important people in my life” during the Lake Lucerne talks in Switzerland over the weekend. Trump has repeatedly called Munir “my favorite field marshal.”

Munir, who had been dubbed “hardline” within the military ranks even before his ascension to the army chief position, also has a bone to pick with Imran Khan. While prime minister, Khan had removed Munir as the head of the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) in 2019. Munir is now spearheading the crackdown on Khan and his party as not just the most powerful man in Pakistan, but now also one of the most influential figures in the region.

This turnaround has pushed a rethink in the PTI, The Diplomat has learned through conversations with the party leadership. Party leaders are now open to the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N)-led government’s longstanding proposition of a “charter of democracy,” originally designed to strengthen parliamentary supremacy, but now largely considered the army leadership’s ploy to reaffirm its authority. Many in the PTI ranks believe that a compromise with the military leadership is the only way forward to maintain any political relevance in the country.

“The military establishment has now become so powerful that it has become impossible to uphold democracy in Pakistan,” a PTI leader told The Diplomat. “Politicians can now only function in the space allowed to them. The hybrid regime is permanent – so Pakistani politics is all about competing for the shrinking civilian space in the hybrid system.” The “hybrid” model of governance, popularized by the current leadership, signifies a civil-military accord, but critics believe it is euphemism for the army dictating all matters of importance.

Numerous PTI leaders express such sentiments and believe that the party needs to abandon its overt anti-establishment leaning and seek a return to the mainstream by agreeing to the proposed “charter of democracy.” Many also believe that any upheaval to undo the military-upheld status quo is unlikely, given the reluctance of the majority of the population to take to the streets in protest to demand justice for Imran Khan (even as he remains the most popular politician in Pakistan).

In this regard, there have been talks between PTI leaders and the government. Last month, the PTI’s Interim Chairman Gohar Ali Khan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Chief Minister Sohail Afridi met with Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi. On June 19, PTI leaders Asad Qaiser and Junaid Akbar led a party delegation into a meeting with Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb. Officially, these meetings have been described as discussions pertaining to “security” and “taxation” policies. However, insider accounts say that there have been conversations on bridging the differences between the PTI and the government vis-à-vis the “charter of democracy.” While the ruling parties are largely playing the role of intermediary, the conversation is actually being had with the military.

“We [the PTI] are always ready for talks in order to establish true democracy. For that there needs to be a level playing field [for all parties]. There should be no political vendetta. The country is ours, and so is the army,” said Qaiser.

The PTI leadership’s changing narrative on the army is already paying dividends. On June 19, the National Assembly lifted its ban on the airing of PTI leaders’ speeches. The day before that, senior PTI leader Shah Mahmood Qureshi, long considered aligned with the military establishment’s policies, was acquitted by an anti-terrorism court. Last week, the Supreme Court restored Imran Khan’s right to contest a defamation case filed by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif. The apex court is also set to hear Khan’s plea regarding access to his lawyers and family.

While any negotiations between the PTI and the military leadership via the ruling parties will inevitably include relief for Khan, many within the party believe that the PTI founder will not endorse the charter of democracy. “He would rather die than accept compromise with the parties. That will undo his entire political legacy,” said a longtime PTI loyalist, speaking on condition of anonymity owing to their stance of having bid farewell to formal politics.

The sentiments were also echoed by veteran politician and former PTI president Javed Hashmi. “Imran Khan might have compromised with the military to come to power [in 2018] but now he has nothing to gain from any compromise – neither with the PML-N and PPP nor the military establishment,” he told The Diplomat.

Given Khan’s popularity, any charter that doesn’t include him and the PTI would not amount to anything significant. “With Imran and PTI, the charter can set up basic rules of the game. Whether or not a charter materializes… an attempt should be made,” said Miftah Ismail, cofounder of the Awaam Pakistan party and a former PML-N leader. He added that the questions over the validity of the charter itself can only become relevant when all parties are on the negotiation table.

The endorsers of the “charter of democracy’ believe that once all major parties agree to have a conversation, they might eventually create a united front to reclaim the space ceded to the military. The detractors, meanwhile, insist that given the expansion of the powers of the army, spearheaded by Munir, the charter today is the formalization of the hybrid regime and sanctioning of the limited role carved out for the civilian leaders.

Given Imran Khan’s popularity, and indeed his own role in facilitating the military leadership’s relentless power grab, he remains critical to any hopes of salvaging democracy in Pakistan. But Khan and the PTI, with all the support they enjoy, might find it hard to undo the autocratic policies of a military leadership that is not only basking in totalitarian policies at home, but today is also hobnobbing with global powerbrokers.


not happening... khan made it clear... return the stolen mandate


To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.





thug rule needs to end.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top