Earlier, KP CM’s brother Faisal Amin Gandapur and leader of opposition Omar Ayub had claimed arrest of the chief minister.
Where is CM KP Ali Amin Gandapur now? Mysterious disappearance of Chief Minister Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Ali Amin Gandapur since Saturday evening has created concerns about his well-being in the rank and file of his PTI party.
As per the media reports, CM KP Gandapur has been in Pakhtunkhwa House of Islamabad. There are contradictory reports about his arrest after being out of the public eye since yesterday.
Government sources have refuted his arrest and said that the Chief Minister Khyber Pakhtunkhwa has not been detained and reports about his arrest are misconceived.
Earlier, KP CM’s brother Faisal Amin Gandapur and leader of opposition Omar Ayub had claimed arrest of the chief minister.
Barrister Saif, provincial adviser information Khyber Pakhtunkhwa has said that the government inflicting harm on the country in enmity of the PTI. “The government has inflicted more loss to the country than terrorism,” he alleged. “The PTI is not a terrorist party, it is the PML-N,” Saif said.
“The constitution and the law have been shattered and the country has been made a ‘Banana Republic’,” he alleged.
‘KP CM crossed all limits’
Interior Minister of Pakistan Mohsin Naqvi, in a press briefing at D-Chowk, warned the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) not to disrupt the law-and-order situation ahead of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) summit.
He stated that KP CM Gandapur has “crossed all limits” but continues to test the patience of the federal government.
Naqvi accused the PTI leadership of tasking CM Gandapur to disrupt a law-and-order situation ahead of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) summit where international heads of state are set to arrive in Pakistan for the first time in years.
“Chief Minister KPK Ali Amin Gandapur is leading a mob with the intent to storm Islamabad. He is fully responsible for the current situation,” Naqvi said, emphasizing Gandapur’s role in orchestrating unrest.
Naqvi warned that there would be consequences for his actions. “He will have to pay the price,” said Naqvi. “I still urge the CM and PTI leadership to avoid clashes and not force law enforcement agencies into taking extreme measures.”
To counter the potential threat, the government has deployed police, Rangers and Frontier Corps (FC), and even called in the Pakistan Army to ensure peace and security.
He added that dialogue could only happen if Gandapur showed seriousness, stating, “Dialogue is not possible alongside attempts to storm the capital.”