'Resistance, not reconciliation': Politicos at National Conference urge PTI to lead struggle

Lawyers criticised what they termed marginalisation of judiciary, while journalists spoke out against the PECA Act

Photo: Gohar Rasheed Twitter

A national conference held under the banner of Tehreek Tahaffuz-e-Aain Pakistan on Saturday agreed that Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf should adopt a path of resistance rather than reconciliation, pledging support for such a course.

According to Express News, an opposition-led forum at Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa (K-P) House in the federal capital brought together representatives from political parties, the legal community, media, and civil society. Speakers criticized recent constitutional amendments and denounced what they called the weakening of parliament.

Lawyers criticised what they termed the marginalisation of the judiciary, while journalists spoke out against the PECA Act. Participants at the conference collectively agreed that “resistance, not reconciliation” should be pursued against what they described as the role of the establishment, urging PTI to take the lead and promising their support.

Gohar calls Imran Khan, Bushra Bibi sentences ‘murder of justice’

Speaking at the conference, PTI Chairman Barrister Gohar Khan said Imran Khan and Bushra Bibi had once again been sentenced, calling the development a “murder of justice.”

He said the party had believed that after May 2025, “the chapter of convictions and sentences would come to an end” and the country would move towards “the supremacy of justice.” He added that PTI had endured pressure without resorting to chaos or sit-ins, “never taking the law into its own hands,” and continued to hope their leader would be released, allowing the Constitution, democracy and rule of law to move forward.

However, he said repeated verdicts “which go against the constitution and the law” were spreading despair among the public and raising questions about the future of democracy.

Read: ATC hands 10-year jail terms to Yasmin Rashid, Omar Cheema, and other PTI leaders 

Barrister Gohar said that after the latest convictions, he posted on X that the party’s leadership had “collectively been handed sentences amounting to 70 years.” He added that Imran Khan and Bushra Bibi had already received 60 years collectively, and seven more cases were pending against the leadership.

“If convictions are handed down in those cases as well, the total sentence could reach 140 years,” he said, questioning “how long such punishments would continue.”

He said judges were no longer secure, political leaders unsafe, and even those in parliament not protected. Referring to Asad Qaiser’s repeated remarks, Gohar said that despite advising against such statements, circumstances compelled them to acknowledge that the country was “effectively under martial law.”

He said the two-day conference would serve as a platform to debate crucial issues, stressing that “neither extremism nor undemocratic forces should be allowed to prevail.”

Gohar added that Imran Khan was not in prison for a crime but “for the freedom of the people,” saying when the public secured its freedom, “their leader will be released.” He called on political actors not to obstruct solutions. “When leaders fail to open paths for the public, people are eventually forced to find their own way,” he warned.

Read More: Imran Khan, Bushra Bibi sentenced to 17 years in Toshakhana 2.0

He said electoral manipulation in by-elections and other developments had deepened the crisis. He added that he had sought permission from Imran Khan for negotiations, saying Mahmood Khan Achakzai and Raja Nasir Abbas had been assigned to decide whether to pursue talks or resistance, “with the backing of the PTI founder and millions of voters.”

Gohar said the movement was named Tehreek Tahaffuz-e-Aain Pakistan, adding that had the situation been anticipated earlier, “it would have been called the Movement for the Restoration of the Constitution.”

Achakzai calls for dialogue

Addressing the conference, Tehreek Tahaffuz-e-Aain Pakistan chief Mahmood Khan Achakzai called for reconciliation among political forces, saying differences should be set aside to pull the country out of crisis.

He said democratic dialogue remained possible and added that if negotiations were to take place, permission should be granted for talks with PTI founder Imran Khan.

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