Qureshi, Khattak, Qaiser, Azhar included in PTI’s 7-member committee for poll talks with govt

The Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) on Saturday constituted a negotiating team to hold talks with the government on the instructions of party chairman Imran Khan.
The team, comprising Shah Mahmood Qureshi, Pervez Khattak, Asad Qaiser, Haleem Adil Sheikh, Aun Abbasi, Murad Saeed, and Hammad Azhar, will be responsible for formulating a plan of action in relation to the elections and engaging with the government.
Earlier, while speaking to journalists at his Zaman Park residence in Lahore, Imran Khan said that if he is disqualified or arrested, Shah Mahmood Qureshi will lead the party, and in the future, Murad Saeed will emerge as a ‘prominent leader’, Media  reported.
"The time will soon change, and in the coming days, I will give a big surprise. There is no fight between me and the military," he added.
Khan said that he has consulted with his legal team for the release of arrested workers, and soon the party will approach the courts in this connection. He said that apart from elections, there is no solution to the country's prevailing issues, adding that the current government has ruined the national economy.
"I know that there is a plan to arrest me, disqualify me, or even kill me. If I am arrested or disqualified, Shah Mahmood Qureshi and Pervez Khattak will handle the [party] affairs," he said.
Imran Khan said that those who are leaving the party, some are forced and real faces of some have been exposed. "The youth are the biggest asset for the party, and they have the right to future tickets. PTI will emerge victorious in the elections."
He stated that President Arif Alvi will work according to the Constitution. "Let's have a referendum today and see the result. I can take an oath on this matter that I have never advocated violence and destruction. If I didn't resort to violence even when bullets were fired at me, how was it possible now?"
Khan further said that everything has been planned against PTI. "When we are winning in public, why should we resort to violence?," he concluded.
Meanwhile, taking to Twitter, Imran Khan has said that backbreaking inflation and unprecedented fall in value of Pakistani rupee is being witnessed while the government has all its focus on the worst crackdown on PTI.
“Dollar [is] selling at Rs310 in the open market and there's record backbreaking inflation in the country right now. While our debt is accumulating at the fastest rate ever, the economy is shrinking. All our annual tax revenue collections do not even cover the interest that we have to pay on our loans.
“While the country's economy is crashing right before our eyes, all this fascist govt is thinking of, are more coercive and oppressive measures to crush PTI," the former premier tweeted.
The PTI chairman said: “Of course to the PDM leadership this historic devaluation of the rupee doesn't matter because all their ill-gotten wealth is stashed abroad in dollars. It will be the people of Pakistan who will experience inflation and poverty while PDM leaders will be beneficiaries of this fall in rupee.”
Reacting to the development, PML-N supremo Nawaz Sharif rejected Khan’s bid to engage in talks with the government, saying “discussions are done only with politicians”.
“There will be no talks with the group of terrorists and saboteurs who burn the memorials of martyrs, set the country on fire,” he wrote on his official Twitter handle.
The committee was established following the arrest of the majority of Imran's key aides, who were taken into custody after his supporters rampaged through the country, setting fire to several public buildings and military installations. While many have since been released, they promptly announced their resignations from the PTI.
Prominent PTI figures such as Shireen Mazari, Aamir Kiani, Amin Aslam, Mahmood Moulvi, Aftab Siddiqui, Fayyazul Hassan Chohan, Firdous Ashiq Awan, Musarrat Cheema, Abrarul Haq and others have announced their departure from the former ruling party.
Asad Umar, a close aide of the PTI chief, resigned from his posts as the secretary-general and core committee member, citing the ongoing situation. His decision came shortly after Fawad Chaudhry, another trusted confidant of Imran, also quit the PTI.
Dozens of other mid-tier leaders have also left. Imran said they were being made to resign under duress in a bid to weaken him and dismantle his party.
Imran had said that previous attempts to speak to the country's powerful generals had gone unanswered.
The civilian government, a coalition of his political rivals, did not indicate that it was willing to talk as the crackdown on his party continued.
The appeal for talks came as the pressure mounted on Khan’s party and supporters, 33 of whom had been handed over to the army to face trial in military courts on charges of attacking the armed forces' installations, according to Interior Minister Rana Sanaullah.
The 33 accused were among the thousands detained since Khan's May 9 arrest sparked violent protests across the country.
Rights groups have raised concerns over military trials of civilians, saying they could not ensure a fair trial. Such courts were closed to outsiders and the media.

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