ISLAMABAD: Just days after senior Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) leaders from Kot Lakhpat Jail publicly endorsed political dialogue with the ruling coalition, the party’s founder chairman Imran Khan has categorically rejected any such overtures, declaring the time for negotiations “is over”.
In a strongly worded message from Adiala Jail released on July 8, Imran Khan effectively vetoed his own senior leadership’s push for reconciliation. Reiterating his commitment to what he termed a “decisive struggle” against a “puppet regime,” Khan announced a full-scale, nationwide protest movement to begin on August 5 — the day marking two years of his imprisonment.
“There will be no further negotiations with anyone,” Khan stated, adding there would be only protests on the streets so the nation can rid itself of these ‘forcibly imposed puppet rulers’.
This stark declaration sharply contrasts with the earlier message from five key PTI leaders — including Shah Mehmood Qureshi — incarcerated in Kot Lakhpat Jail, who publicly called for unconditional talks between political parties as well as with the security establishment. Their appeal was described by political observers as a rare consensus-building opportunity amid political instability.
Government leaders, including from the PMLN and PPP, had responded positively to the PTI leaders’ letter. Federal Minister Khawaja Saad Rafique even called the letter “significant and wise,” urging both sides to seize the moment and initiate unconditional talks for the greater good of democracy.
But Imran Khan’s latest statement appears to have extinguished those hopes — at least for now. Khan’s statement underscores what has long been viewed as a fundamental contradiction within the PTI.
A senior PTI official, speaking to this correspondent on condition of anonymity, admitted the growing internal dilemma. “There is a realization among many that engagement is the only way forward. But if Imran Khan says no, the door remains shut.”