'Do-or-die': PTI sets 90-day ultimatum for anti-govt drive to achieve 'political goals'

"Negotiations will be with decision-makers," says Ali Amin Gandapur quoting PTI founder Imran Khan

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KP CM Ali Amin Gandapur addresses a press conference in Lahore on July 13, 2025. — Screengrab via Geo News
KP CM Ali Amin Gandapur addresses a press conference in Lahore on July 13, 2025. — Screengrab via Geo News 
  • Will seek permission to hold rally in Lahore: Gandapur.
  • Says PTI founder ready for talks with "decision makers".
  • "Ready to be punished for mistakes," says KP CM.

LAHORE: Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Chief Minister Ali Amin Gandapur has labelled the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI)'s newly launched agitation against the incumbent rulers as "do or die," saying the anti-government protest movement would determine the party's future course of action.

"We have to decide in 90 days whether to do politics or not. The [protest] movement will be a do or die [in nature]," Gandapur said while speaking at a press conference in Lahore alongside Salman Akram Raja and others.

The firebrand politician's remarks come a day after the former ruling party formally launched its anti-government campaign, set to reach its "peak" by August 5, following a high-level huddle in the provincial capital.

Among other objectives, the protest movement is aimed at securing release of party founder Imran Khan, who will complete two years in jail on August 5.

The Imran Khan-founded party's latest round of anti-government drive comes months after its negotiations with the government stalled over the issue of the formation of judicial commission to probe the May 9 riots and November 2024 Islamabad protest.

The PTI, ever since Imran's ouster from the PM's office via a no-confidence motion back in 2022, has been at loggerheads with the then Pakistan Democratic Movement (PDM) and the current coalition government led by the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N).

Apart from facing political challenges, the party and its leadership have been embroiled in a plethora of legal cases, including Imran and other senior leaders such as Shah Mahmood Qureshi, Yasmin Rashid, Ejaz Chaudhry and others behind bars for quite some time.

Although these jailed leaders have pressed for dialogue, it was previously reported that Imran had categorically rejected the negotiations as being the only way forward and further stressed that "there will be no further negotiations with anyone" and that there would be only protests on the streets.

Expanding on the party's latest protest movement aimed at achieving political goals, CM Gandapur said that it would be led by the PTI founder, who held the party's decision-making power.

"We are fighting a war for the people of Pakistan. A fascist campaign is being launched against us again and our constitutional right to protest is being taken away.

"We will seek permission to hold a rally in Lahore tomorrow. Give me permission to hold a rally in Lahore and do not provide any facilities," he said, adding that he would support anyone willing to hold a rally in KP and would even provide facilities to them.

On the issue of reconciliation and dialogue, the chief minister said that Imran was ready to negotiate but had said that talks could be held with "decision makers".

"Negotiate within 90 days and end the [prevailing] issues," the politician remarked.

"We are ready to face the punishment for the mistake[s] we have made, [but] the law of the land should be the same for everyone," he noted. 

Firing a broadside at Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam-Fazl (JUI-F) chief Maulana Fazlur Rehman, the CM challenged the former to contest an election against his brother.

"If Maulana [Fazlur Rehman] cannot win, then he should leave politics," he said.

The remarks refer to the JUI-F chief's remarks wherein he said that there should be a change in the province, and it should emerge from within the PTI — a hint towards the rumour mill concerning the possibility of a no-confidence motion against the Gandapur-led government in KP.