Pakistan ex-PM Khan urges government to hold talks over snap polls
		
		 
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		 [December 02, 2022]  
		By Mubasher Bukhari 
		 
		LAHORE, Pakistan (Reuters) - Pakistan's former prime minister Imran Khan 
		on Friday urged the government to hold talks to decide a date for an 
		early election to end an impasse that has stoked political instability 
		since his ousting in April. 
		 
		The 70-year-old cricketer-turned-politician has been leading a 
		countrywide agitation, demanding an early election following his removal 
		in a parliamentary vote led by his united opposition. 
		 
		Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, who replaced Khan, has rejected the 
		demand for the snap polls, saying that the election will be held as 
		scheduled later next year. 
		 
		Khan has lately threatened to dissolve parliaments in two provinces, 
		which are ruled by his party and coalition partners. 
		 
		"Either sit with us and talk as to when the next elections should be 
		held, or else we will dissolve the assemblies," Khan said in an address 
		to his party members telecast live. 
		  
		
		
		  
		
		 
		The talks offer is a step back by Khan, who has previously been refusing 
		to sit and negotiate anything with the coalition government, which 
		contains former opposition parties he has said comprise a corrupt 
		political elite. The parties reject that allegation.  
		 
		Khan rode to power after winning a general election in 2018, which his 
		opponents say he secured through a rigged ballot engineered by the 
		country's powerful military, a charge both Khan and the military deny.
		 
		 
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            Pakistan's former Prime Minister, Imran 
			Khan, gestures from behind a bullet-proof glass window, in his first 
			public appearance since him being wounded in a gun attack earlier 
			this month, during so-called 'a true freedom march' to pressure the 
			government to announce new elections, in Rawalpindi, Pakistan 
			November 26, 2022. REUTERS/Akhtar Soomro 
            
			
			
			  
            The dissolution of the two provincial parliaments could trigger a 
			constitutional crisis in the South Asian nation, which is already 
			facing political and economic instability.  
			 
			The government has said it will hold elections in the two provinces 
			if Khan decided to dissolve them. 
			 
			In response to Khan's statement, Interior Minister Rana said the 
			government could hold the talks sought by Khan, adding it was also 
			ready to hold elections in the provinces in case the parliaments 
			were dissolved. 
			 
			Khan last week called off over a month-long protest march in his 
			first public appearance since he was shot at and wounded in a 
			gun-attack last month in November. 
			 
			(Reporting by Mubasher Bukhari in Lahore; Writing by Asif Shahzad, 
			Editing by William Maclean) 
            
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