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PTI will go into Opp if 'tsunami' fails: Imran

18 January, 2012

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ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) chief Imran Khan says he is happy to go into opposition if his "tsunami" of popular support fails to bring him a landslide victory at elections now widely expected within months.

The 59-year-old former cricketer has ridden a wave of support buoyed by mass rallies and has openly backed the courts' pursuit of embattled President Asif Ali Zardari and Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani.

But in an interview with AFP at his hilltop villa outside Islamabad, Khan admitted that his fledgling movement could suffer if a series of crises force general elections earlier than September or October.

"The 'tsunami' is ready. We will be ready. Obviously it suits our party... if this government goes for another six months," he said.

If the current government collapses earlier than the summer, Khan could see his popularity put to a premature test.

"We would happily go into the opposition if we can't form a government because basically it's a battle between forces of status quo and forces of change," Khan said.

Speculation is widespread that the PTI is being quietly groomed by the powerful military, which are believed to back moves in the courts to chip away at Zardari and Gilani's authority.

"I think it's the endgame because the government – it's been openly defying the Supreme Court," said Khan.

"I don't think the Supreme Court is going to back down. They've called the prime minister dishonest so really in any decent democracy he should have resigned by now and then asked to go back to the people."

But he added, "No one wants martial law in this country, none of us want it. I think the time for martial law is over in Pakistan."

Khan insists his relationship with the generals is a "sensible" one that would put him clearly in charge should his party sweep to power.

"If I'm the prime minister, if I have the responsibility, I have the authority," he said.

Khan rules out forming a coalition with any of the "status quo" parties he considers venal and corrupt – Zardari's Pakistan People's Party or opposition PML-N led by former prime minister Nawaz Sharif.

Instead he is confident that his prescription for Pakistan – unbuckling the country from the US-led war on terror alliance with the United States by refusing foreign aid and launching a massive austerity drive – will succeed.

End.

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