Imran’s PTI loses majority in parliament as ally jumps ship
The biggest ally in Khan’s PTI-led coalition was MQM, which chose to join forces with the opposition
Pressure is mounting on Pakistan's embattled Prime Minister Imran Khan to step down after a crucial ally quit his ruling coalition and joined forces with the opposition seeking to force him from office in a looming no-confidence vote in parliament.
The Muttahida Qaumi Movement Pakistan (MQM-P) party, a major political force in Sindh province, on Wednesday announced it is leaving the ruling Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI)-led coalition government.
Former cricket star Khan, 69, has been facing mounting domestic criticism of his performance, including the management of an economy beset by high inflation and rising deficits, reports Reuters.
An increasingly united opposition has moved oust him through a no-confidence vote due between Thursday and Monday, in which support from Khan's allied parties was critical.
The leader of Khan's main parliamentary ally the Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM), Khalid Maqbool Siddiqui, announced his party was joining the bloc looking to oust Khan following a written agreement between the two sides.
"I announce that we are with you in this change," Siddiqui said at a news conference alongside opposition leaders on Wednesday.
Khan's PTI does not have a majority in the National Assembly by itself and has relied on the support of coalition allies, the biggest of which was the MQM, based in the southern port city of Karachi. read more
"We have sent our resignations to the prime minister," Amin-ul-Haq, a member of Khan's cabinet from the MQM, told local television channel Geo News.
Khan's ouster would likely mean another round of instability in the nuclear armed south Asian country, in which the military has a long record of intervening in politics and no prime minister has completed a full five-year term in its history.
Opposition leaders Shahbaz Sharif and Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, standing alongside MQM's Siddiqui, called on Khan to resign before the vote now that he had lost his majority with the defection of the MQM.
"We have 175 votes against the required 172," said another opposition leader, Fazl-ur-Rehman, after the MQM's decision to quit the ruling coalition.
However, Khan's aides said he would not back down or resign.
"He will not resign. He will fight till the last ball," Interior Minister Sheikh Rasheed Ahmad told reporters after a cabinet meeting on Wednesday. "He will probably be present in the parliament during the vote on Sunday."
Khan has said on numerous occasions in recent days that there was a "foreign conspiracy" to oust him because he had taken what he termed independent foreign policy decisions.
In a public rally earlier this week, Khan waved around what he claimed was a letter that was evidence of a threat given to his government. He did not say who the letter was from, but indicated it pertained to a Western country.
On Wednesday, local media reported that Khan met select journalists to share the contents of the letter to press his point.
Under Khan Pakistan, a traditional ally of the West, has moved closer to China, while relations with Washington have deteriorated.