[PICTURES/VIDEOS] PTI holds major rally on Islamabad’s outskirts

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A major PTI rally has commenced on the outskirts of Islamabad on Sunday, with workers from across the province gathering at the venue for the event, the party announced on the X platform.

The rally began with Party leader Hammad Azhar addressing the crowd, stating that supporters had gathered today to establish the rule of law and the supremacy of the Constitution in the country.

He added that no obstacle would deter them today.

“We will, God willing, secure Imran Khan’s release.”

The rally, initially scheduled for July and later August, was postponed twice after authorities revoked permission, citing security risks and fears of unrest.

The party is staging the rally today to gain support for the release of the party’s founder Imran Khan, who has been imprisoned since last August. Imran was expected to be released from prison after a district and sessions court accepted appeals against his conviction in the Iddat case. However, the National Accountability Bureau (NAB) arrested him in a new Toshakhana case shortly afterward.

His sentences in the previous two Toshakhana cases were already suspended while he was acquitted by the Islamabad High Court (IHC) in the cipher case, too.

For the past several months, the PTI had been trying to get approval for a public meeting in the capital but it was not allowed by the administration.

The party approached the Islamabad High Court (IHC) for permission in March after receiving no response from the district administration.

In July, the PTI announced a protest but it was postponed as district administration did not allow the party to hold the protest. The meeting was rescheduled for August 22 but district administration cancelled the NOC at the eleventh hour, giving a new date of Sept 8.

Police block Islamabad’s entry points ahead of rally

As the party finalised its preparations for the rally today, the capital police blocked almost all entry points of the city amid intelligence reports of a ‘medium-level’ terrorism threat in light of the political gathering.

The 21 points blocked with containers are Nicholson’s Monument, New Margalla Road turn on G.T Road, Sangjani Toll Plaza, Water Tanki on Margalla Road, New Margalla Road Loop opposite F-10/2, 26 Number Chongi, Zero Point, Faisal Chowk, Khayban Chowk, Rawat T-Cross, Khanna Bridge, Tramri Chowk, Shahpur Road Turn, U-Turn on Murree Road, Bridge on Murree Road near Traffic Office, Faizabad, 9th Avenue, Gandum Godown, Golra Mor Haji Camp, Motorway Old Toll Plaza, and Tarnol Phattak, they added. All the roads leading to the ‘red zone’ except for the Margalla Road are also blocked.

The party’s Punjab spokesperson Shaukat Basra said in a post on X that the Punjab police hierarchy had given “unconstitutional” orders to its formations across the province (to stop workers).

Speaking to Dawn, Basra said the party leadership had changed its strategy in the wake of the police movement and asked its workers across the province to reach Islamabad individually. “Workers have been asked to avoid police action and reach Islamabad individually,” Mr Basra said.

The district administration earlier this week issued a no-objection certificate to the public gathering on the outskirts of Islamabad, with a condition that the permission can be cancelled at any time in case of a “security situation”.

The venue is a 350-kanal compound located on Paswal Road near Sangjani and is reportedly under the control of the military establishment.

The selection of the venue has also energised the PTI workers as they believe that the ice has started to melt between the PTI and the powers that be.

Senior PTI leader and former Speaker of the National Assembly Asad Qaiser decried the placement of containers and police blockades, deeming them the measures of a “fascist government… creating a hostile environment”.

“It is unfortunate that this fascist government with a stolen mandate is creating such a hostile environment,” Qaiser said in a video message uploaded by the PTI to X. “They approved the NOC (non-objection certificate) and the court has permitted the rally, but Rawalpindi has been closed off.”

He accused the government of defying court orders by attempting to block routes to the rally.

“They break the law themselves, yet they lecture us on it,” he stated.
 
Why doesn't he just join PTI officially and contest in the elections?

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All will shout and go back in week and in another 6 months again repeat cycle. No matter how many Jalsa or salsa u people conduct that egomaniac won't come out of jail .U all need to understand Bangladesh succeeded bcz Miltary remained Neutral otherwise they would never in their dreams succeed. Here in Pakistan establishment is the ruler how do u think this salsa or jalsa is going going to work 😳 🤔
 
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Supporters clash with cops at PTI rally as leaders demand Imran’s release

PTI leaders rallied on the outskirts of Islamabad on Sunday, demanding the “immediate release” of their founder, Imran Khan, while criticising the government for marginalising the party as police fired tear gas to disperse the crowd.

The party was staging the rally today to gain support for Imran’s release, who has been imprisoned since last August. Imran was expected to be released from prison after a district and sessions court accepted appeals against his conviction in the Iddat case.

However, the National Accountability Bureau (NAB) arrested him in a new Toshakhana case shortly afterward.

His sentences in the previous two Toshakhana cases were already suspended while he was acquitted by the Islamabad High Court (IHC) in the cipher case.

The rally began with party leader Hammad Azhar addressing the crowd, stating that supporters had gathered today to establish the rule of law and the supremacy of the Constitution in the country.

He added that no obstacle would deter them today.

“We will, God willing, secure Imran Khan’s release.”

Speaking during the rally, PTI leader Ali Muhammad Khan demanded Imran’s “immediate release” and lamented how the party’s leaders were being “sidelined” by the government.

“I never thought there would be a day that Imran Khan, who formed our party to save Pakistan, would be put in jail,” Ali Muhammad said.

He added that today, neither PTI stalwarts Murad Saeed nor Shehryar Khan Afridi were present at the rally, nor was Qasim Khan Suri.

“Why can Murad Saeed not come out of hiding? Is it a crime to love Pakistan, or speak the truth? We will continue speaking the truth, as will our children”, he asserted.

“Today, Pakistan’s biggest party is in Pakistan, but our workers cannot go to parliament. What is their crime?”

PTI maverick Sher Afzal Khan Marwat said: “We have one message for the Pakhtuns, that we will go to Punjab within a week, and Ali Ami Gandapur will tell you the date.

“These people, who erected the containers, whose police charged you with batons, I want them to listen [that] we are coming to Lahore,” Marwat said.

Meanwhile, during her speech, PTI member Aliya Hamza Malik questioned whether Pakistanis wanted true freedom and their rights or wished to continue witnessing enforced disappearances in the country.

“Do you want a Pakistan for future generations, or one where your homes are attacked? Come out and demand Imran Khan’s release, you will all come and support me, as I know you are standing with the leader in Adiala.

“He will see how he’s struck fear into the government. We need to come out for our leader’s release now.”

Towards the end of the rally, PTI supporters clashed with the police as the latter tried to disperse them. Footage emerging on television and social media showed the police firing tear gas shells to disperse the crowd.

According to the police, the local administration had designated a timeframe for the rally, but as it exceeded the hours, the police had to attempt to disperse the supporters, which led to clashes and the ultimate use of tear gas shelling.

Police added that by exceeding the timeframe, the rally organisers had violated the rules and regulations detailed in the no-objection certificate (NOC) issued to the party. Thus, the Islamabad DC ordered police to disperse the attendees, instructing police and the administration to take strict action.

According to a notification dated September 8, a copy of which is available with Dawn.com, the designated meeting time was from 4pm to 7pm. Rally organisers were informed of the timing at 6pm, the notification read.

Police and PTI workers faced off at Chungi No 26, where workers allegedly pelted stones at responding police officers. Senior Superintendent of Police (SSP) Safe City Shoaib Khan was among the many policemen injured in the clash, per the police.

Meanwhile, the shelling continued by the police to disperse the workers from the area.

Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi took notice of the clashes and sought a report from the inspector general of Islamabad Police. According to a statement from the interior ministry, Naqvi has been in contact with the injured SSP and has ordered the provision of the best medical facilities to the injured policemen.

Slamming the police intervention at the rally, PTI’s Azhar called it an “idiotic move” in a post on X.

“What an idiotic move to start shelling on peaceful participants,” he wrote. “Will raise the political temperature in a situation where the public is already furious at the form 47 govt.”

Meanwhile, talking to the media, Awaam Pakistan chairman Shahid Khaqan Abbasi said that the people should be allowed to protest and that authorities need to learn from the mistakes of the past.

“If someone’s protesting, let them. We need to learn from the past and allow the people to speak their minds.”

The PTI and the PML-N will come to be if there’s unity, he added.

“We should not think about a party or a seat, but about the country as a whole.”

Senior PTI member and former president of Pakistan Dr Arif Alvi also took to X to criticise the police’s attempts to disperse the rally.

“Shameful, cruel, cowardly, and senseless act. Conspiracy to destroy a peaceful assembly,” he wrote. “I appeal to the people to remain peaceful because those who can impose a false May 9th can raise all kinds of false flags. May God destroy the enemies of Pakistan.”

Meanwhile, Information Minister Attaullah Tarar said that the people of the country had “rejected PTI’s rally”.

According to the state broadcaster, Radio Pakistan, Tarar said that the PTI was “spreading lies and propaganda” by uploading fake videos on social media.

“PTI’s leadership of Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa has miserably failed in mobilising the masses”, the report quoted him as saying.

Tarar, according to the report, added that it was the democratic right of a political party to hold a public rally, so there was nothing special in this regard.

“However, the rally should end within the time allowed by the district administration,” he said.

The rally, initially scheduled for July and later August, had been postponed twice after authorities revoked permission, citing security risks and fears of unrest.

For the past several months, the PTI had been trying to get approval for a public meeting in the capital but it was not allowed by the administration.

The party approached the Islamabad High Court (IHC) for permission in March after receiving no response from the district administration.

In July, the PTI announced a protest but it was postponed as district administration did not allow the party to hold the protest. The meeting was rescheduled for August 22 but district administration cancelled the NOC at the eleventh hour, giving a new date of Sept 8.

As the party finalised its preparations for the rally today, the capital police blocked almost all entry points of the city amid intelligence reports of a ‘medium-level’ terrorism threat in light of the political gathering.

The 21 points blocked with containers are Nicholson’s Monument, New Margalla Road turn on G.T Road, Sangjani Toll Plaza, Water Tanki on Margalla Road, New Margalla Road Loop opposite F-10/2, 26 Number Chongi, Zero Point, Faisal Chowk, Khayban Chowk, Rawat T-Cross, Khanna Bridge, Tramri Chowk, Shahpur Road Turn, U-Turn on Murree Road, Bridge on Murree Road near Traffic Office, Faizabad, 9th Avenue, Gandum Godown, Golra Mor Haji Camp, Motorway Old Toll Plaza, and Tarnol Phattak, they added. All the roads leading to the ‘red zone’ except for the Margalla Road are also blocked.

The party’s Punjab spokesperson Shaukat Basra said in a post on X that the Punjab police hierarchy had given “unconstitutional” orders to its formations across the province (to stop workers).

Speaking to Dawn, Basra said the party leadership had changed its strategy in the wake of the police movement and asked its workers across the province to reach Islamabad individually. “Workers have been asked to avoid police action and reach Islamabad individually,” Mr Basra said.

The district administration earlier this week issued a no-objection certificate to the public gathering on the outskirts of Islamabad, with a condition that the permission can be cancelled at any time in case of a “security situation”.

The venue, a 350-kanal compound located on Paswal Road near Sangjani, is reportedly under the control of the military establishment.

The selection of the venue has also energised the PTI workers as they believe that the ice has started to melt between the PTI and the powers that be.

Senior PTI leader and former Speaker of the National Assembly Asad Qaiser decried the placement of containers and police blockades, deeming them the measures of a “fascist government… creating a hostile environment”.

“It is unfortunate that this fascist government with a stolen mandate is creating such a hostile environment,” Qaiser said in a video message uploaded by the PTI to X. “They approved the NOC and the court has permitted the rally, but Rawalpindi has been closed off.”

He accused the government of defying court orders by attempting to block routes to the rally.

“They break the law themselves, yet they lecture us on it,” he stated.

 

Imran's party defies odds, breaks capital rally barrier​


At last, PTI did not fall victim to nervous 90s, shattering the long-standing psychological barrier as it rallied in the heart of the capital after the general elections - an achievement that many thought was a bridge too far.

Proving the party's political muscle despite the odds, the PTI supporters poured into Islamabad on Sunday with flags held high and heads unbowed.

However, the build-up was fraught with tension. The government hurriedly passed a law on peaceful assembly, locked down the twin cities, and reportedly closed highways and motorways linking Islamabad with the rest of the country.

The government's actions fed the impression that the ruling coalition was looking over its shoulder, uneasy about an opposition flexing its muscles so close to the corridors of power.

Nevertheless, despite stern warnings from the administration and a government reaction that made it seem like a do-or-die situation, PTI not only managed to secure permission for the Jalsa but also successfully held the rally outside of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa - its stronghold for over a decade - following the general elections.

Political analysts noted that the party, battered by repeated crackdowns and its leader Imran Khan's imprisonment, managed to turn a tough situation into a political win. Political analysts saw the rally as a major milestone, setting the stage for PTI's future manoeuvres.

Raza Ahmad Rumi, a policy analyst and journalist, and Professor Tahir Naeem Malik of NUML University opined that PTI managed to gather a sizeable crowd despite the restrictions, noting that it also showed that the party still enjoys public support amid its claims that its mandate was stolen in the elections.

While sharing his views, Rumi said that PTI managed to assemble a sizable crowd despite restrictions and "it was a success for the party that feels aggrieved at the hands of the establishment."

The expert noted that the legal and administrative hurdles backfired as the rally on Sunday night received media attention as well as mobilized its support base.

"While the party may have crossed a psychological barrier of holding a rally outside KP, it will not majorly change the power equation; and the clear-cut policy of government and establishment on keeping Imran Khan in prison," Rumi said.

Commenting on the government's reaction, Rumi said that the government's reaction was self-destructive as it appeared nervous and insecure and "reaffirmed PTI's narrative that the ruling coalition does not enjoy public support."

To the question of what impact will the political activity have in the coming days, Rumi noted that "Pakistan's political chess board is set by the unelected institutions such as the military and the present government has outsourced politics to those who should be staying away from political contests."

"People have once again expressed confidence in PTI just like they did on February 8," Professor Tahir Naeem Malik of NUML University said, "holding a power show out of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and taking the center stage amid lockdown and crackdown is a success for PTI after a while."

Commenting on the impact and how it could help PTI in the coming days, the professor noted that PTI was discussed, appeared relevant and managed to create momentum, which it feels is necessary for future events.

He said the PTI leadership and workers have come out amid a difficult situation, saying it's the outcome of the party's long legal battles supported by party organisations.

Malik noted that the absence of a local bodies system was also evident as the deputy commissioner was calling the shots, adding the government's reaction helped a normal activity to turn into a big power show.

He felt that the government didn't want to even give PTI space for holding normal political activity, saying it did not want PTI to gain any momentum.

 
Won’t tolerate Imran’s military trial, PTI warns

At a long-awaited public rally on Sunday, the leadership of the Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) demanded the immediate release of jailed party founder, vowing it would not stand for a military trial of Imran Khan.

“If Imran Khan is not released in two weeks, we will go to get him released,” Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) Chief Minister Ali Amin Gandapur told participants of the PTI public meeting in Sangjani, on the outskirts of the capital.

If Mr Khan is not released, he warned the PTI’s ‘verbal struggle’ could turn into a ‘bloody struggle’.

He also threatened their opponents, saying if Mr Khan was not released, he would institute cases against them in his province. “Now the KP government is completely in our control and I will make cases against you,” he said.

“Imran’s lawyers have said that all cases against him have been decided in his favour and now he must be released immediately, otherwise we will go to the jail to get him released,” he said.

Addressing the military establishment, the KP CM said that even they could not prevent him from securing Imran Khan’s freedom.

Beset by postponements and the absence of official permission from the Islamabad administration, the show of strength had been in the making for several weeks now.

But considering the hurdles placed by the administration, and the long-winded routes many had to take to make it to the venue, the turnout at the public meeting was quite impressive by the time darkness fell.

Responding to a statement by Defence Minister Khawaja Asif that Imran Khan could face a military trial because of his involvement in the May 9 mayhem, Mr Gandapur said: “Even your father, or those you consider your father, cannot stop us from getting Imran Khan released.”

He claimed the PTI had not received former ISI chief retired Lt-Gen Faiz Hameed “in their dowry” and said those who made him head of the spy agency were responsible for his deeds.

“Keep your house in order, otherwise we will keep the military in order. It is our institutions where our brothers are serving on the borders,” he added.

The KP CM said PTI founder was targeted under the garb of May 9 cases, adding that he would reveal at the next public meeting at Lahore. “I will tell all that May 9 was an excuse to target Imran Khan,” he added.

He said the PTI had decided not to tolerate any injustice and excesses, and will respond accordingly.

“If anyone hits us, we will hit them,” he added.

Mr Gandapur also told the participants of the public meeting that they would soon receive a call to make a ‘bloody sacrifice’ to secure what he called ‘real freedom’.

No ‘minus Imran’ formula

Speaking on the occasion, PTI Chairman Barrister Gohar said his party would not tolerate any new cases instituted against Mr Khan, and was hopeful that the party founder would soon be released from jail.

He said that Imran Khan was a reality and everyone would have to accept that reality. “This is not the 1990s that you can ‘minus’ someone,” he said, adding that Imran Khan was, is and would remain their leader.

He lamented that even though permission was granted to hold a public meeting, the local administration had fully barricaded the federal capital so that PTI workers could not reach the venue. “All the routes leading to the public meeting were blocked with containers,” he added.

Pashtoonkhwa Milli Awami Party Chief Mahmood Achakzai and other PTI leaders, such as Omar Ayub, Hammad Azhar also spoke on the occasion.

‘Failed show’

For its part, the government termed PTI’s public meeting “a failed show”, saying that the opposition party had not managed to mobilise people or bring them out of their homes.

“Millions of people who were supposed to bring a revolution today, nobody knows where they have gone. Have they gone to some other country or another place,” Information Minister Atta Tarar said on Sunday.

Speaking to the media, he claimed that the PTI had to resort to fake videos to give the impression of huge rally and uploaded false and fake posts on social media to cover up thin attendance.

He made it clear that the PTI leadership could not escape accountability by such tactics, adding that the PTI founder will have to face trial for corrupt practices.

He remarked that the PTI’s leadership both in Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa had completely failed to bring convoys to the public rally.

Separately, he blamed the PTI for the clashes with police at Chungi No 26, saying that PTI did not believe in peaceful protest.

He remarked that the PTI’s leadership both in Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa had completely failed to bring convoys to the public rally.

“PTI has a track record that it always adopted a path of violence. PTI workers clashed with police after the failure of its public meeting,” the minister said.

Mr Tarar said CM Gandapur, who was leading a rally from Peshawar, intentionally reached the venue of the public meeting late after he got to know about the “failure” of the event.

 
PML-N’s Talal Chaudhry vows to send KP CM Ali Amin Gandapur to jail over police clashes in Islamabad

PML-N Senator Talal Chaudhry on Monday vowed legal action against Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Chief Minister Ali Amin Gandapur for leading party supporters who “attacked and pelted stones” at Islamabad police at last night’s rally.

Chungi No 26, on the outskirts of the capital, turned into a battleground on Sunday night as police clashed with PTI supporters after the latter allegedly refused to stick to the designated routes for the public gathering in Sangjani.

A dispute with the district administration over the agreed timeframe for the event also caused consternation among official circles.

Police claimed that PTI supporters ignored the traffic instructions and insisted on using the route set for the general public, which caused tensions to rise before PTI supporters started pelting police with stones.

In response, the police party retaliated and resorted to baton charge and tear gas shelling. Dozens of protesters were also arrested and bundled into prison vans, and were later taken to different police installations.

In a televised address today, Chaudhry said: “Once again, the Islamabad police was deliberately attacked by the people who had come to Islamabad under the leadership of the KP chief minister.

“Not only will those who attacked and pelted stones but also their mastermind will be arrested and sent to jail over this chaos,” he asserted.

Chaudhry said: “No one stopped them (PTI supporters). No policeman stood in their way. There was no obstruction [yet] they attacked the police on purpose in a botched attempt to hide their failed jalsa.

“Not only will the law take its course but in the coming days, I see his future from being the KP chief minister to going to the Adiala Jail,” the PML-N senator said.

Ahead of the PTI event, the Islamabad administration had taken extraordinary security measures and blocked all the entry points of the city with containers.

Addressing Gandapur, the PML-N lawmaker said it was “not possible that you threaten the institutions and the parliament that we will not let things run”.

“We have vowed that we will not let political incitement continue […]. No matter how much legislation we have to do to achieve this or give strict punishments, we will do so,” Chaudhry affirmed.

“As long as you had the facilitation and General Faiz [Hameed], you were able to do everything [but] now, you could not even organise a small rally,” the PML-N leader claimed.

He went on to say that even if the PTI held scores of rallies or initiated a movement over May 9 cases or the £190m graft case against incarcerated party founder Imran Khan, it would “not get an NRO”.

The senator censured the PTI leaders at Sunday’s rally for only speaking about Imran rather than the issues affecting the common citizens, such as inflated power bills, rising food costs and the economy.

Hinting at difficulties for the PTI in obtaining permission for future rallies, Chaudhry said that the party’s violation of the agreement with the Islamabad administration for the rally would be considered when reviewing future requests.

Accusing the PTI-run Khyber Pakhtunkhwa government of corruption, the Chaudhry demanded that the party “return the money embezzled” under the Peshawar metro, Billion Tree Tsunami, and road construction projects.

“It is not possible that the money that should have been spent on the people of KP is used to organise rallies and descent upon Islamabad,” he said.

During his address, the PML-N leader went as far as terming Imran an “Israeli agent”, basing his allegation on a recent blog in Times of Israel that itself termed Imran’s potential role in shaping Pakistan-Israel relations as “speculative”.

 

Federal Ministers accuse PTI of misusing resources for Islamabad rally​


Federal ministers Attaullah Tarar and Engineer Amir Maqam have alleged that attendees at the opposition’s recent rally were forced to participate, accusing the opposition of using unethical tactics to fill their event.

Speaking at a press conference in Islamabad, the ministers criticized the opposition, particularly the Chief Minister of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa, for his use of provocative language at the rally.

Amir Maqam claimed that public resources were misused for the gathering, and that the opposition's rhetoric is focused on threats rather than solutions for the nation.

He further stated that Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) leaders were involved in internal conflicts over corruption, leading to a disconnect with the public.

He highlighted the disrespectful remarks directed at Maryam Nawaz during the rally, calling it an affront to the nation's traditions.

Information Minister Attaullah Tarar reiterated that Pashtun traditions of respect for women were violated at the event and condemned the opposition for failing to address critical issues like terrorism.

He also pointed to PTI’s governance failures in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, criticising their inability to launch a single major project during their tenure.

Both ministers concluded by stating that the rally had been a failure and urged PTI to shift its focus towards serving the people of the province.

Earlier, Attaullah Tarar asserted that the public had rejected the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) rally on Sunday.

In a statement regarding the PTI event, he noted that traffic in Islamabad and Punjab remained normal, questioning the whereabouts of the millions of people who were supposed to bring about a revolution.

He criticised PTI for using fake videos to promote their rally and accused the party of employing false and fabricated tweets to conceal the event's failure.

He claimed that the PTI engaged in spreading false information and propaganda on social media.

 
What's the point? May 9 has shown is that establishment will crush everyone. Imran Khan has turned out to be another failed project binned to the history by Pakistan military.
 
What's the point? May 9 has shown is that establishment will crush everyone. Imran Khan has turned out to be another failed project binned to the history by Pakistan military.

It’s Pakistan, Imran Khan could be out in a couple of weeks and Nawaz Sharif could be sitting in Jail by December.
 
Of course it's over when you have likes of gandapur coming to islamabad playing pashto songs defiling maryam safdars name and saying we will sort out establishment claiming his father was killed by the them.

Saying establishment is killing afghan children so they are not going to send you flowers but suicide bombers.

Then it's definetly over.

Pti is an ethnofascist movement from kpk that's what it's become.
 
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One of the demands is to remove army from kpk

Lakki marwat police want pakistan army out the same police who is corrupt full of corrupt admissions will hand over their stations and areas to ashnas from afghanistan who will the use it as launch pad to attack into punjab and other areas.

Everytime there is an attack these gandapur appointed police abandon their posts they are in charge of kpk and have conspired with infiltration of terrorists.

I said before you in these 2 province kpk and balochistan u need to appoint governor raj and declare martial law.

There is not going to be a romantic fairytale of old of 10000 troops butchered in khyber pass because today is the 21st century it's all about intelligence operations, fast special forces and more importantly drones which can enter holes and trenches as we saw in armenia and ukraine.
And if all else fails massive firepower from air and artillery gone are the days of horse drawn wagons , coolies carrying pots and troops marching 100s of miles carrying muskets .
 

Court grants bail to Sher Afzal Marwat, other PTI leaders in Islamabad rally case​


An anti-terrorism court in Islamabad has granted bail to several arrested members of the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) National Assembly, including Sher Afzal Marwat and others.

The court ordered their immediate release upon the submission of surety bonds worth Rs30,000 each.

The hearing, presided over by Judge Abu Al-Hasnat Muhammad Zulqarnain, reviewed the cases of the arrested PTI lawmakers.

The prosecutor argued that Member of the National Assembly (MNA) Ahmad Chattha had been named in the case, which carries a minimum sentence of three years.

However, the court inquired whether any evidence had been recovered from Sher Afzal Marwat, Ahmad Chattha, and other legislators, to which the prosecutor confirmed no such recovery had been made.

The arrested PTI members, including Sher Afzal Marwat, Sheikh Waqas, Ahmad Chattha, and others, were booked under anti-terrorism charges in multiple police stations, including Sangjani, Tarnol, and Noon.

Last week on September 9, Islamabad police arrested PTI Chairman Barrister Gohar Ali Khan MNA Sher Afzal Marwat outside Parliament House following a National Assembly session on Monday.

According to Express News, a heavy police presence had gathered outside the Parliament House in anticipation. As PTI leaders exited the building, police took positions and swiftly moved to detain Marwat.

Police officials reported that at least three cases were filed against PTI supporters and leaders at Sangjani and Noon police stations following Sunday's rally.

Police also stormed the parliament last week to arrest several PTI leaders, as well as the head of the Sunni Ittehad Council (SIC) Sahibzada Hamid Raza.

The arrests came a day after PTI ventured into a legal minefield to stage its rally in the capital on Sunday, the government wasted no to arrest its leaders for flouting the last-gasp laws hastily enacted ahead of the highly anticipated event – widely seen as a test of embattled party's political muscle.

 
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