PTI claims hidden hands behind attempts to pitch biggest party against 'majors'

Gohar says PTI did not intend to heighten tensions, urges humility and space for dialogue

PTI Chairman Barrister Gohar Ali Khan addresses a press conference in Islamabad on Saturday, flanked by Salman Akram Raja and Asad Qaiser. SCREENSHOT

Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf Chairman Barrister Gohar Ali Khan expressed strong disappointment over comments made by the Pakistan Army spokesperson a day earlier, calling the language “inappropriate” and harmful to democratic norms.

The statement came a day after the director general of the military’s media wing, Lt Gen Ahmed Sharif Chaudhry, on Friday assailed incarcerated former premier Imran Khan, calling him a “threat to national security” and warning that no one would be allowed to incite the public against the armed forces.

Speaking at a news conference in Rawalpindi, the ISPR chief said Khan’s “anti-army” rhetoric had crossed the limits of politics and now posed a direct threat to the nation’s security. He added that the military had deemed it necessary to confront the “creeping national security threat.”

Addressing a press conference in Islamabad on Saturday, Gohar said a major institution’s senior official using such words — even indirectly — for a large political party, its leadership, or the chief minister of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa was unfortunate for democracy. He said the statements made in the press briefing were “very disappointing” and the language used “not appropriate.”

Gohar stressed that PTI did not intend to heighten tensions. “This press conference is not for confrontation. But we want to make clear that some people appear to be trying to create conflict between the workers of a major political party and personnel of a major state institution. This must not happen.”

Read: Military calls Imran's narrative 'threat to national security'

Throughout the press conference, PTI leaders said they did not seek confrontation or political instability. Gohar said “Some people want fights. We do not. We want dialogue, humility, and space.”

Despite what he described as serious allegations, Gohar said the party would not retaliate with aggression. “We are not going to respond to a brick with a stone, but we need to tell the public what has happened to us.”

Load Next Story