PM Imran spoke in bad taste in Malaysia: Ahsan Iqbal

PML-N leader says PTI government would not be able to complete its tenure due to is misdeeds

Ahsan Iqbal. PHOTO: REUTERS

HYDERABAD:
Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) leader Ahsan Iqbal has said Prime Minister Imran Khan has spoken in bad taste about the country’s internal politics in Malaysia.

Addressing a PML-N workers convention in Hyderabad on Thursday, he said that PM Imran was crying that the opposition was not letting him run the government.

The PML-N leader contended that the blame game cannot continue for long adding that Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf’s government would end its tenure due to their misdeeds.  “We will not let them become political martyrs,” he said.

He said PM Imran lacked the skill of heading the government and character assassination of the opponents was his only flair.  “He has been taking one U-turn after another.”

The PML-N leader accused the PM of spoiling whatever progress on the economic front was made by the PML-N government, adding that he is still using the acerbic language which was his hallmark during the protracted sit-in protests at the D-Chowk in Islamabad.


“He is portraying a negative image of Pakistan globally. His government stands on a heap of lies.”

He said the elected government were not allowed to continue their terms without conspiracies and attempts to send them packing. He praised Nawaz Sharif for improving the country’s security during his second tenure and blamed General (retd) Pervez Musharraf for plunging the country into morass of terrorism.

He said PML-N restored peace in Karachi and predicted that Karachi and Hyderabad would become the world’s largest twin cities in the near future. He also credited his party’s former government for linking Gwadar with Sindh through the highway.

“In the present era, the importance of electricity is like oxygen,” Iqbal observed, praising the N league’s government for adding 12,000 megawatt in the country’s total power generation.  whereas in the former six decades preceding their 2013 government the net production of electricity stood at 18,000 MW.

 
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