'PML-N Competent To Solve Pakistan Crisis': Nawaz Sharif As He Ends Self-Imposed Exile Of 4 Yrs
If elected, the former Prime Minister claims his party would be able to tackle the problems of the people.
Nawaz Sharif, the chief of the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N), has stated that he is returning to Pakistan after "vindication" and that his party is "competent enough" to shepherd the country out of crisis, Geo TV reported. "I am returning to Pakistan after being vindicated by the grace of Almighty Allah," he told to media at Dubai airport on Saturday, before departure to Pakistan. The three-time former prime minister has returned to Pakistan after a four-year self-imposed exile in London, aiming to make a political comeback in the upcoming general elections, which are scheduled for the final week of January next year.
If elected, the former Prime Minister claims his party would be able to tackle the problems of the people.
In response to a query about the general elections, Nawaz backed the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP).
When questioned about the January polls, Nawaz stated: “Only the Election Commission can make a better decision regarding the elections. What the Election Commission thinks is right is my preference on the elections," Geo TV reported.
He also stated that the country has a "fair" Election Commission.
The PML-N supremo feels that his party is capable of leading Pakistan out of its current dilemma. “We are competent enough to solve the country's problems,” he was quoted by Geo TV in its report.
While noting his prior sting powers, the PML-N supremo bemoaned that the country is in a far "worse situation" rather than a good one.
“The situation in Pakistan is very disturbing and that is very worrying,” he stated.
Return Of Father 'Biggest Day Of My Life': Maryam Nawaz
Maryam Nawaz said on Saturday that her father Nawaz Sharif's return to Pakistan after four years was the most important day of her life and that the country will witness the former prime minister stage another political comeback, news agency PTI reported.
Sharif, 73, came home on a special aeroplane on Saturday after a four-year self-imposed exile in the United Kingdom to lead his party in the January general elections.
The anguish and suffering that Nawaz Sharif has undergone in the previous 24 years are incomparable, and certain scars will never heal, but the number of times Nawaz Sharif has risen is probably not similar for anybody else, Maryam remarked in a post on X.
'National Criminal': Imran Khan’s Party On Nawaz Sharif’s Return
Calling former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif a "national criminal," Imran Khan's party stated on Saturday that the state had buried shame, modesty, law, and justice with its own hands by allowing the "coward fugitive" to come home under "judicial asylum."
Imran Khan's Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) responded angrily to the homecoming of Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) supremo, claiming the "coward fugitive is returning under judicial asylum."
A PTI spokesperson claimed in a statement on Saturday that the "state has buried shame, modesty, law, and justice with its own hands" to prepare the way for a "national criminal's return" to the country from London.