Senator Jamiat Ulema-i-Islam-Fazl (JUI-F), Kamran Murtaza, said on Saturday that his party required written guarantees of the PTI to address his reserves to participate in joint anti-government protests after Eidul Fitr.
Earlier this week, after not obtaining any concession for the founding president of the party, Imran Khan, the PTI announced that he would celebrate protests outside the Adial prison in the three days of Eidul Fitr.
At the beginning of the month, the Chief of Jui-F, Maulana Fazlur Rehman, also revealed plans to launch a national protest campaign, together with the PTI, against the government after Eidul Fitr, citing the growing corruption and deterioration of the law and order in Baluchistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.
“We would like the agreements made between PTI and Jui-F to document in writing to eliminate any possibility of misunderstandings or guilty in the future,” Mutaza said during an interview with Dawnnews program Doosra Rukh On Saturday.
The Jui-F senator added that the process to achieve a consensus could only be expelled after EID, since he and others in the match had already left to his hometown for the holidays.
PTI Mohammad Humayun Mohmand senator responded to Murtaza and, while he agreed with him, he said: “It was also Sunnah To write agreements in writing. “
Both senators also agreed that there were “trust problems” between the two political parties due to their history, but agreed that they were now in repair.
“The place of protest could be D-Cowk or any other place that can be decided with consensus,” added Senator Murtaza.
“The decision has been made for the protest, but it should not be decided whether we will celebrate a joint protest with PTI or separately.”
The PTI senator, Mohmand, replied that if the protests occurred separately or together, it had been decided that it would take place, and could be a “two -pointed approach” against the government.
On March 16, the Chief of Jui-F, Maulana Fazlur Rehman, acknowledged that the true leadership of the PTI remained in jail, admitted that the tensions between the two parties had decreased, racing the way for a possible alliance.
The president of the Public Accounts Committee and the head of the PTI Khyber Pakhtunkhwa chapter Junaid Akbar, in a televised interview, had said that the party workers would have protests in the three days of Eidul Fitr outside the Adiala prison where Imran was imprisoned.
He also said that if the government wanted to hold conversations with the main opposition party, (the government) has to take the first step and show its seriousness in the conversations.
He said that everything is not ideal in the opposition alliance, but efforts are being made to strengthen the alliance.
“The parties in Tehreek-i-Tahaffuz-I-Ayeen-i-Pakistan (TTAP) are supporting us. Now we have been trying to obtain support from political forces that are not part of Parliament. We have also contacted Jamaat-I-Islami’s leadership, and I have much hope that the situation will improve,” he said.
While admitting that there are some differences within the parties, Akbar said that so small obstacles will not affect the alliance.
“We will march towards Islamabad after Eidul Fitr, but we may also be able to maintain a protest outside the Adiala prison in three days of Eidul Fitr,” he said.