Expelled member of the PTI Faisal Vawda said on Monday that he has not yet presented the proof that he claimed to have at a news conference held earlier in connection to the killing of journalist Arshad Sharif. The press conference was conducted in regard to the murder of Arshad Sharif.
The former minister, Faisal Vawda made these statements as he was talking to the media in the nation’s capital: “It is a sensitive subject to discuss. It is not appropriate to make a poor joke about this situation.”
The former senator said once again that Sharif was killed as a result of a plot, and that he was shot at a rather close range.
“Pakistan was sleeping until I conducted a press conference,” Faisal Vawda claimed, adding that the late journalist’s phone and iPad were not located after his murder. “Pakistan was asleep,” Vawda added. “I organized a press conference.”
Faisal Vawda said in his commentary on his hypotheses on the individuals who were responsible for the murder of Sharif that the people who were involved are powerful, strategists, and knowledgeable.
“Criminals, who easily escape from Pakistan, should be captured,” he added, emphasizing that we don’t need to reach the shooters, but rather those who ordered the massacre. “Criminals, who easily depart from Pakistan, should be arrested,” he said.
Vawda, when discussing the internal affairs of the PTI and their potential influence on the future of Chairman Imran Khan, said that the individuals — whom he accused of replacing Khan — will become prime minister and have the party’s head dismissed.
He said that he still considers Khan to be his leader and that he would go to Khan whenever he is called, and he stated that Khan should clean the party from the inside. “Imran Khan should clean the party from the inside,” he said.
The previous week, Vawda made the assertion that “certain individuals” want to change the party chairman and said that “all three snakes are candidates for the prime minister’s seat.”
In addition to this, he asserted that “two confidants and three snakes fostered disagreements between Khan and the establishment.”