Imran Khan says doesn’t care who’s next COAS

By
Web Desk
|
October 06, 2022

Former premier says he considers consulting a criminal" when deciding on country's army chief as "security threat"

Former prime minister and PTI Chairman Imran Khan gestures as he speaks during an event. — AFP/File


LAHORE: PTI Chairman Imran Khan said Wednesday he was indifferent to the appointment of the new army chief and all he wanted was the new commander should be worthy of that crucial office.

“I don’t care who becomes the next army chief,” the former premier said talking to journalists in Lahore.

"But he, the army chief, should be appointed on merit. They [government] want to bring a chief of their choice. How can a criminal appoint the army chief?" Khan said.

He said in his view, consulting a "felon" on the selection of army chief was a "security threat".

"They are scared about their own corruption. I don't have any fear," Khan said.

Commenting on the issue of the lost cypher, Khan said: "The cypher has not been stolen. Its master copy remains with the Foreign Office. Thankfully, they have accepted [that there was] a cypher."

The PTI chief added that if the investigating committee — probing the disappearance of the cypher — summons him, he will first ask whom Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asian Affairs Donald Lu ordered to be removed.

When responding to a query, Khan said October 16 — the date set by the Election Commission of Pakistan for by-elections on eight National Assembly seats — was far and there’s a possibility that by-polls might not be held.

“The Election Commission of Pakistan is partial and they (the government) want to have me disqualified.”

He further criticised the coalition leadership and said that PPP Co-chairman Asif Ali Zardari and PML-N supremo Nawaz Sharif's Toshakhana cases should be heard simultaneously.

"I have not done anything illegal. On the other hand, they (Zardari and Nawaz) took expensive cars home which they were not entitled to,” Khan claimed.

The former prime minister also slammed Interior Minister Rana Sanaullah and said how could he stop his party from marching to Islamabad.

"Our government functions in all four corners [...] we are in Punjab, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, and Azad Kashmir. He (Sanaullah) is just threatening us," Khan said, adding that the government itself is a "security threat".



More From pakistan