Gandapur gives 90-day ultimatum for Imran Khan’s release

Listen carefully, decision-makers: after the 90th day, it’s either us or you," said K-P CM at a meeting in Lahore

Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa Chief Minister Ali Amin Gandapur addresses a PTI meeting in Lahore on Saturday, July 12, 2025. Photo: SCREENGRAB

LAHORE:

Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa Chief Minister Ali Amin Gandapur on Saturday gave a 90-day ultimatum to those at the helm of the affairs for the release of PTI founder Imran Khan with a do and die warning.

The remarks came during a high-profile gathering in Lahore, where parliamentary committees of Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) from Punjab and K-P met to chalk out the party’s future course. The meeting marked what party leaders described as the formal launch of a renewed protest campaign focused on securing Khan’s release and resisting what they see as growing authoritarianism.

“Listen carefully, decision-makers — listen, custodians of the state — our 90 days begin today. on 91st day, it will be either us or you. Enough is enough,” Gandapur said while addressing the joint session while accusing “a handful of powerful individuals and parties” of hijacking the political system, likening them to a “mafia” that had entrenched itself over decades.

Read More: Shehzad Akbar named key accused in £190m case

The chief minister led participants in taking an oath to intensify efforts for Khan’s release, calling the incarcerated party founder “innocent” and imprisoned for “fighting for a better system and the future of this country.”

Criticising what he called the imposition of de facto martial law, Gandapur said such actions had “devastated our democracy,” and claimed they were eroding public trust in institutions.

“Those responsible feel no remorse. They use blackmail and violence as tools,” he alleged, adding: “I am the son and brother of a soldier. It is painful to see the reputation of our army being tarnished by a few individuals’ interference.”

The K-P CM reiterated that he took orders from no one but Imran Khan. “Even if threats are made, I will remain answerable only to the public and to my leader,” he said.

Addressing workers across the country, he urged party supporters to begin preparing for protests in their respective regions, encouraging local leadership to take the lead.

“We announce a movement, and our workers are abducted — this won’t go on,” he said. “Let me be clear, I will respond now, even if some in my own party disagree. If you shoot at me, be ready to be shot at too. If you act unlawfully, we will respond in kind.”

Responding to reports of alleged attempts to dislodge the PTI-led government in K-P, he said: “Go ahead, try to bring it down. You didn’t give us this government — we earned it through struggle and public support.”

Also Read: PM Shehbaz pledges economic turnaround through structural reforms

The gathering took place at a farmhouse on Raiwind Road in Lahore, shortly after the arrival of a convoy led by Gandapur and PTI Chairman Barrister Gohar Ali Khan from Islamabad.

Party sources said the meeting focused on legislative strategy, protest planning, and possible alliances between regional power blocs. Opposition Leader in the Punjab Assembly Malik Ahmad Khan Bhachar termed the Lahore meeting a “symbolic awakening” of the province, warning of sit-ins if the PTI’s political space continued to be restricted.

Earlier in the evening, a high-profile PTI convoy arrived in Lahore amid a heightened police presence, arrests of party workers, and escalating tensions with the Punjab government.

The convoy, which departed from Islamabad earlier in the day, arrived at the Raiwind Road farmhouse of former Deputy Senate Chairman Mirza Muhammad Afridi, located near the Sharif family estate in Lahore. A dinner and strategic meetings of PTI’s parliamentary committees were scheduled at the venue.

Load Next Story