Prime Minister Imran Khan on Wednesday said he will show the ‘threatening letter’, that he referred to in his public rally in Islamabad on March 27, to senior journalists and government allies later today.
The premier made these remarks during a ceremony in Islamabad marking the launch of the e-passports facility.
During the ceremony, the prime minister talked about the no-confidence motion, especially the existence of the alleged letter, which warned of ‘dire consequences’ if he continued to stay in power.
However, the opposition has rejected the premier’s claims; and concerned quarters did not find any evidence of an external plot to remove Imran from power.
Imran said that the no-confidence motion was a “democratic” right in a parliamentary democracy, but as per him, the current no-trust move was “funded by foreign powers”.
PM Imran said foreign powers could not accept leadership that worked for the people of Pakistan and criticised the United States’ War on Terror, saying Pakistan “sacrificed its interest” for foreign powers but they never “valued” its sacrifices.
In an allusion to the alleged letter, Imran said he would show it to senior journalists and allied parties to show that it was “real”.
“I will show this document to the top journalists as its details could not be shared in public,” he said, calling the move to remove him a part of a “huge international conspiracy”.
The letter controversy
The controversy arose after Premier Imran, in his speech at a public rally on Sunday, claimed that there was a “foreign-funded plot” being hatched against his government. He showed a letter, but without divulging its contents, as evidence of the existence of the conspiracy aimed at toppling his government. Imran insisted that efforts were being made to seek his ouster since he pursued an “independent” foreign policy.
Since his revelations, many questions are being asked including whether the letter was written by any country or was an internal assessment shared by one of the foreign diplomatic missions of Pakistan.
The Express Tribune sent a questionnaire to the FO spokesperson asking all the relevant queries but he offered no comments.
The “threatening letter” was also shared with the military leadership, according to Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi. But relevant quarters revealed that they had “no knowledge” of any such plot and neither did they see any evidence.