Maryam Nawaz Demands PM Imran Khan's Resignation at Mandi Bahauddin Rally
Addressing Khan in her speech, she said: 'Give your resignation! Go home!' and urged the crowds to chant along with her, Dawn news reported.
Islamabad, July 8: Maryam Nawaz, the daughter of former Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, has severely criticised Prime Minister Imran Khan and demanded his resignation, the media reported on Monday. In a post-midnight rally on Sunday in Mandi Bahauddin, the 45-year-old opposition Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) Vice President, raised slogans against Khan and said that the 66-year-old cricketer-turned-politician does not have any legitimate right to rule Pakistan. Pakistan Judge Says Nawaz Sharif's Daughter Maryam Tried to Bribe Him, Calls Video 'Fake'.
Addressing Khan in her speech, she said: "Give your resignation! Go home!" and urged the crowds to chant along with her, Dawn news reported. Maryam also said that keeping her 69-year-old ailing father Sharif in jail will be a crime now, following Saturday's "evidence" alleging that his sentencing had been given under "immense pressure from hidden hands", a claim rejected on Sunday by the presiding judge, Arshad Malik.
In her address, which was held on Jail Road, she claimed that Sharif "will be released, and will become prime minister once more - but this time more powerful than ever before". At a press conference in Lahore on Saturday, Maryam said that the entire judicial process regarding the trial that led to her father being convicted and sentenced to prison was severely compromised. Pakistan Judge ‘Blackmailed’ Into Issuing Verdict Against Nawaz Sharif, Says Daughter Maryam.
She also played a secretly recorded video that she claimed featured a conversation between Nasir Butt, a man she described as a loyal fan of Sharif, and Malik, who had in December last year sentenced Sharif to seven years in jail in the Al-Azizia Steel Mills corruption reference and acquitted him in the Flagship Investment case. But on Sunday, Malik rejected Maryam's allegations, saying that Sharif was convicted on the basis of evidence.