PTI made a mistake of giving Bajwa extension: Asad Qaiser

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Pakistan Tehreek-E-Insaf (PTI) leader and former National Assembly speaker Asad Qaiser has admitted that the party made a mistake by giving an extension to former army chief Gen (Ret) Qamar Javed Bajwa and said he “apologizes” for the decision, Express News reported.

When we spoke at a press conference with leaders of Tehreek-E-Tahaffuz-Ein Pakistan on Sunday, Qaiser claimed that the country is currently under “de facto martial arts” and that the existing system is “neither constitutional nor legal.”

He claimed that a “Whisper campaign” was underway on a possible 27th constitutional change, adding that the lawyer’s movement would begin to oppose it. “We have decided to use any forum, both inside and outside parliament,” he said.

He approached speculation that he could become an opposition leader, he rejected the reports and said he expected PTIS Omar Ayub to return and take on the role.

Qaiser called for the cases against PTI founder Imran Khan to be heard of profits. He criticized the disqualification of the opposition leaders in both parliamentary houses and called it “a father.” “Everywhere in the world, legislators enjoy privileges and can visit prisons. Isn’t it illegal to prevent an assembly member from going to jail?” He asked.

The former speaker accused the administration of pushing decision makers and warning that Pakistan was heading for “serious anarchy.” “If the cases are heard on profits, there is nothing in them,” he added.

Bajwa was named Coas by PML -N leader Nawaz Sharif in 2019 and expanded by PTI chairman Imran Khan in 2019 -who served the nation as army manager for six years. Qaiser was the house’s speeches under the excitement, which ended up showing the door to PTI’s government through voting on non-confidence.

After resisting until the last moment, he handed the seat to Pakistan Muslim League Nawaz (PML-N) leader Ayaz Sadiq to continue with the historic vote that resulted in the first time that broke out any prime minister through the constitutional process.

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