Aleema Khan welcomes PTI -Parliamentarians’ Unit at the Lahore Meeting

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Pakistan Tehreek-E-Insaf (PTI) leader Aleema Khan greeted the collection of PTI parliamentarians in Lahore on Monday and called it a positive step for the party and the province of Punjab.

In a speech with the media at Gorakhpur Checkpost, Aleema said the Lahore meeting was encouraging for Punjab and reflected unity among party laws.

“It’s a good sign that all PTI parliamentarians met in Lahore,” she said. “We had always said that MNAs and MPAs from Punjab would demonstrate unity and this meeting confirms it.”

She said that Punjab had witnessed significant injustices in the last two years and that such gatherings were needed to tackle these issues.

She praised the Lahore event and said all members supported the initiative. “The meeting is to be appreciated. We are pleased with it,” she added.

In response to questions about the absence of a particular Punjab-based leadership from the event, Khan said they were not informed of any such exclusion. “We were told that this was a meeting with parliamentarians. We are not aware of why Punjab’s management was not invited,” she said.

When she expressed optimism, she concluded, “God willing, everything will be fine.”

On the other hand, a new internal dispute has emerged within PTI after the party’s Punjab chief organizer, Aliya Hamza, publicly questioned the rationale and strategy behind PTI’s recently launched 90-day protest movement.

The party had previously announced a “do-or-die” campaign intended to challenge the government and shape PTI’s political direction.

However, tension emerged when Hamza was excluded from a key strategy meeting held in Lahore, raising the eyebrows within party rows.

When asked about her absence, PTI secretary Salman Salman Akram Raja said Hamza had been “too busy in the last two days” to join the collection.

In response, Hamza took the social media platform X and sent a sarcastic remark: “Such a hustle and bustle that might not even realize!”

She continued to question the planning and goals of the movement, where she asked where the strategy for Imran Khan’s release had been outlined and how the campaign would be performed. She also challenged the origin of the 90-day timeline and compared it with the previously mentioned deadline 5 August.

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