How Imran Khan Pushed His Country Into Political Uncertainty
THE WEEK|April 17, 2022
Though Pakistan is amid a constitutional crisis, imran khan may have strengthened his position
Mandira Nayar
How Imran Khan Pushed His Country Into Political Uncertainty

History in Pakistan is never the past. It looms large and is on loop. No prime minister has ever completed a five-year term. No prime minister has ever lost the no-confidence motion either. Only two faced it—Benazir Bhutto and Shaukat Aziz. Imran Khan became the first to duck the motion.

The slow month of fasting in Pakistan began with a bang as Khan dissolved the national assembly before the vote, in which the numbers were against him. Khan threw a googly, claiming that the motion was “foreign-inspired” and “foreign-funded”, and Pakistan slipped into a constitutional crisis.

Pakistanis now look to the Supreme Court for relief; the opposition has termed this a civilian coup. The only certainty is uncertainty. Early elections have been called by President Arif Alvi, in 90 days. A news report suggests that the Election Commission of Pakistan has expressed its inability to conduct elections at short notice.

“In a way, Imran Khan has played out the script that the military’s favorites always fall out,” said T.C.A. Raghavan, former high commissioner to Pakistan. “No one had expected this alliance to end this way.” The hybrid system has failed. Khan often said that his government was on the same page as the military, especially when it came to India. That is now officially over.

This story is from the April 17, 2022 edition of THE WEEK.

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This story is from the April 17, 2022 edition of THE WEEK.

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