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Why Pakistan army is targeting Imran Khan’s party

The party founded by ousted Prime Minister Imran Khan is in shambles weeks after supporters took to the streets to protest the politician’s arrest. 

The protests snowballed into deadly riots targeting military installations across the country. Now, thousands of party workers and activists have been thrown in jail, and top figures have defected. Local media have been ordered not to mention Mr. Khan’s name on air, and the capital is smattered with posters glorifying the Pakistan army and denouncing the perpetrators of May 9.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Who’s responsible for the May 9 riots in Pakistan? As the army sets out to gut former Prime Minister Imran Khan’s party, some Pakistanis, looking to the not-so-distant past, say that furor is misdirected.

Indeed, Pakistan’s powerful army, which recently promised to stop meddling in the country’s political affairs, has launched a campaign to dismantle the very party it helped bring to power back in 2018. 

In spite of the dangers of speaking up against the military, journalists and politicians are questioning the fairness of persecuting ordinary supporters of Mr. Khan while the true architects of his rise – the military establishment – remain largely untouched.

“Every child knows who the real culprits are,” says political commentator Gul Bukhari. “The puppets are important. They did play a role … but if that’s where it stops, that’s not going to resolve our problems.”

Pakistan’s powerful military is cracking down on the party founded by ousted Prime Minister Imran Khan, weeks after his supporters took to the streets to protest the politician’s arrest. These protests snowballed into deadly riots targeting military installations across the country, and now the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaaf (PTI) party is in shambles.

Thousands of party workers and activists have been thrown in jail. More than 100 top PTI figures have defected. Rights groups decried the intimidation of sympathetic journalists last week after several overseas commentators were charged with sedition, and local media have been ordered not to mention Mr. Khan’s name on air. Islamabad and the adjoining city of Rawalpindi are smattered with posters glorifying the Pakistan army and denouncing the perpetrators of May 9 – a day the army has termed “Pakistan’s 9/11,” though commentators around the world say it bears closer resemblance to the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Congress. 

Indeed, the army, which recently promised to stop meddling in the country’s political affairs, has launched an organized campaign to dismantle the very party it helped bring to power back in 2018. In spite of the dangers of speaking up against the military, journalists and politicians are questioning the fairness of persecuting ordinary supporters of Mr. Khan while the true architects of his rise – the military establishment – remain largely untouched.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Who’s responsible for the May 9 riots in Pakistan? As the army sets out to gut former Prime Minister Imran Khan’s party, some Pakistanis, looking to the not-so-distant past, say that furor is misdirected.

“The Pakistan army has a history of reacting harshly against real or perceived attacks on its preeminence,” says Husain Haqqani, former Pakistani ambassador to the United States. “The May 9 attacks on military facilities and installations were larger than anything the army has faced before. … The crackdown in response has also been disproportionate and heavy-handed.”

K.M. Chaudary/AP

Imran Khan (center) leaves after appearing in a court, in Lahore, Pakistan, on June 7, 2023. Mr. Khan faces more than 100 legal cases and has also been charged with terrorism for inciting people to violence.

Project Imran

In the early 2000s, near the end of Gen. Pervez Musharraf’s military rule, the exiled leaders of Pakistan’s two traditional ruling parties, the Pakistan Muslim League and the Pakistan People’s Party, pledged to cooperate to reestablish a civilian-led democracy. As a result of this alliance, Pakistan witnessed its first-ever peaceful transfer of power between civilian governments in 2013. Seeing its influence threatened, the army began to promote Mr. Khan and the PTI, a populist party that had seen limited success until this point.

“They decided to do whatever it took to upend that understanding between the existing political forces within the country by injecting Imran Khan into the system,” says political commentator and activist Gul Bukhari. “They had to abduct people; they had to torture people; they had to gag the media” to ensure the former cricketer’s victory in the 2018 elections.

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