ISLAMABAD [Pakistan]: A multi-party opposition alliance has decided to approach the courts to seek permission to hold a rally in Faisalabad on May 17 as part of its movement to 'save' Pakistan's Constitution, reports Pakistan-based Dawn. Have done. Formed in April, Tehreek Tahafuz Ain-e-Pakistan is a six-party coalition for the supremacy of the rule of law and protection of the Constitution. A part of his movement, Tehreek Tahafuz Ain-e-Pakistan had decided to hold a show of strength in Faisalabad and Karachi. Addressing a lawyers' conference in Faisalabad on Wednesday, Sunni Itteha Council chief Hamid Raza said they had decided to continue the rally even if the government had not given permission. However, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (
Founder Imran Khan was not in favor of the idea, he said
Activists will have to bear the brunt He said that according to the Dawn report, Imran Khan asked his legal team to approach the courts for permission.The coalition chief, Mahmood Khan Achakzai, said he asked Punjab Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz to order the Punjab Police chief to allow public gathering in the city, as he also supported his father Nawaz Sharif's narrative of civil supremacy , Hamid Raza further said, "Now that
He is victorious on all the National Assembly seats except one in Faisalabad, then why is he not being allowed to hold a public meeting in the city." According to the report, Raza criticized the establishment for its role in politics. He said that every time a civilian leader had invoked the supremacy of law, former National Assembly Speaker of Pakistan Asad Qaiser had called him 'anti-state' and insisted that Imran Khan's political career was based on the rule of law. Tehreek Tahafuz Ain-e-Pakistan, a multi-party alliance of opposition parties launched earlier this year, has launched a campaign across the country for the "restoration" of the Constitution. Pakistan-based Dawn reported that in April, the six-party alliance decided to launch a nationwide movement for the rule of law and arrest Mahmood Khan Achakzai. Chosen as its president, the opposition's decision to launch the campaign was aimed at protecting the Constitution.