Pakistan’s former prime minister Imran Khan has been sentenced to 14 years in prison for corruption, another setback for the beleaguered leader who has already spent over 18 months in jail and is facing more than 100 cases.
Khan, who remains the country’s most popular political figure, has maintained that the cases against him are part of a “political witchunt” to keep him out of power. Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) governed from 2018 to 2022 but he was toppled from office after losing the support of the country’s powerful military. He subsequently embarked on a public spat with the army leadership, accusing them of involvement in a plan to assassinate him.
Since his arrest he has faced a mounting number of cases, including murder, terrorism, and breaching national security. Khan was convicted in three cases, including for selling state secrets and illegal marriage, but they were later overturned or suspended last year. However, he has remained in prison.
Is that what happened back in 2022? (PROTIP: it is not)
Maybe the US tried to dissolve the democratically elected legislature to avoid them voting against their interests?
Oh, wait, that was what Imran Khan tried to do when the vote began.
“Imran Khan is mistreated by the current government ran by his spiteful opposition” and “America did not pull a coup in Pakistan” are not mutually exclusive positions.
Is that supposed to reinforce the idea that it was a ‘coup’? A diplomat saying that a prime minister’s diplomatic policy will create diplomatic repercussions?
lmao
Direct threat to make a government to overthrow their leader is ‘diplomacy’.
The direct threat of… damaged diplomatic relations?
Yes blackmail.
Jesus Christ.
Do you also consider the US sanctions against the ICC to be ‘diplomatic pressure’? That is the argument you are making.
Would you like to cite the part where sanctions were threatened?