Pakistan Parliament dismisses no-confidence motion against Khan
Al JazeeraPresident dissolves National Assembly which means elections will be held within 90 days. Imran Khan has survived a move to oust him as Pakistan’s prime minister, getting a reprieve when the deputy speaker of Parliament blocked a no-confidence motion as unconstitutional. Khan, whose fate was not immediately clear, later advised the country’s president to dissolve Parliament, leading to fresh political instability in the nuclear-armed country of 220 million people. The National Assembly deputy speaker, of the ruling Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party, dismissed the move against Khan on Sunday, saying it went against Article 5 of the Constitution. Calls it an international conspiracy to unseat an elected prime minister pic.twitter.com/HxbqyF2bxX — Osama Bin Javaid April 3, 2022 “We have decided to hold sit-in in the National Assembly unless voting on no-confidence motion takes place,” Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari, chairman of Pakistan Peoples Party, told reporters.