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'Go To India’: Maryam Nawaz Hits Out At Pakistan PM Imran Khan For Praising India

Pakistan PM in his address to nation on Friday had said: ‘"No superpower can force India to do anything against its interests. They (India) are buying oil from Russia despite sanctions. Nobody can dictate India. What th🍌e European Union ambassadors said here, could they say that to India also?’

'Go To India’: Maryam Nawaz Hits Out At Pakistan PM Imran Khan For Praising India
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Pakistan’s Opposition leader Maryam Nawaz on Saturday lashed out at Prime Minister Imran Khan for lavishing praise on India, saying he should go to 🌜the neigh꧃bouring country if he likes it so much.

The remarks ✅of Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) Vice President Maryam, who is the daughter of deposed prime minister Nawaz ꧙Sharif, came after Khan called India a "nation with a great sense of honour".

Prime Minister Khan, in an address to the nation on Friday night ahead of the no-trust motion where he has little chances of surviving unless some miracle takes place, said that he was not against India and had a lot of following in th🃏e neighbouring country.

 "No su⛎perpower can force India to do anything against its interests. They (India) are buying oil from Russ🍎ia despite sanctions.

"Nobody can dictate India. What the European Union ambassadors said here, could they say that to India also?” he asked and added that they🌠 could not because India🌠 is a sovereign nation.

Responding 𒐪to his remarks, Maryam said that Khan has🧜 “gone mad”.

“Someone should tell a person who has gone m൲ad after seeing this power gone that he has been expelled by his own party and no one else.

“If you lik🏅e India so much then shift🐓 there and leave the life of Pakistan,” the 48-year-old PML-N leader said.

This was not the first time when Prime Minister Khan has praised India to the surprise of Opp൩osition parties.

Last week, he praised India fo▨r its independent foreign policy.

"They protect their independent foreign policy w🃏hich i⛎s centred on its people," he had said.

The 69-year-old cricketer-turned-politician, who has effectively lost the majority in the 342-ওmember house, s🌳eemed to accept the writing on the wall and urged his supporters to stage peaceful protests across the country when the "new imported government" comes into power on Sunday.

Khan faces the possibilit🔯y of being the first premier in the country’s history to be voted out in a no-trust motion.

No Pakistani prime minister has ever completed a full five-year term in off🦂ice.

Meanwhile, the Opposition has completed its initial talks for the formation of a new go𓄧vernment once Prime Minister Khan is ousted. Plans are afoot for the removal of President Alvi and the return of deposed premier Nawaz Sharif from the UK, The Ex🌼press Tribune newspaper reported on Friday.

She🅠hbaz, 70, who is the Opposition’s candidate for the new prime minister, will announce his possible government priorities after taking the oath.

All Opposition parties will be given proportional rep🥂resentation in the new pඣossible federal government.(With PTI inputs)