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IMRAN KHAN

 Imran Khan

Imran Khan

Imran Khan is a former international cricketer and the 22nd Prime Minister of Pakistan. In addition to leading the Pakistan National Cricket Team, he was Chancellor of Bradford University in the United Kingdom in 2005 and 2014. In 1996, Khan Pakistan founded Tehreek-e-Insaf and served as its chairman. In memory of his mother, he launched a fundraising campaign to build an oncology hospital in Lahore and raised $ 25 million.



Born in Lahore, his patriarchal family is of Pashtun ethnicity and belongs to the Niazi tribe. Khan grew up with his four sisters in high middle class conditions. He was educated at the Royal Grammar School in Worcester, England, where he excelled in cricket. In 1972, he enrolled at Keble College in Oxford, where he studied philosophy, politics and economics and graduated in 1975.



Years of cricket


Khan made his cricket test against England in 1971 in Edgbaston. In 1976, he returned to Pakistan and secured a permanent place on the national team. In the late 1970s, Khan was one of the pioneers of reverse swing bowling. He also has from one to the highest batting average of all time 61.86 for a test batsman who plays at position 6 in the batting order.

Khan played his last test match for Pakistan in January 1992 against Sri Lanka in Faisalabad and ended his career with 88 test matches, 126 innings and recorded 3807 runs with an average of 37.69, including six hundredths and 18 fifties.


Come into politics


On April 25, 1996, Khan Pakistan founded Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) and ran for the National Assembly of Pakistan in the 1997 Pakistan general election as a PTI candidate in two constituencies - Mianwali and Lahore - but was not. succeed. both were defeated. places of candidates of the Pakistan Muslim League.




He ran again in Pakistan's general election in 2002 and was ready to form a coalition if his party did not win a majority. He was chosen from the Preacher.





In the 2018 general election, Khan will move polls from Bannu, Islamabad, Mianwali, Lahore and East Karachi. On July 28, the Pakistan Election Commission announced that the PTI had won a total of 116 out of 270 disputed seats.




During his triumphant speech, he revealed the policies of his future government. Khan said his inspiration was the creation of Pakistan as a humanitarian state based on the principles of the first Islamic state of Medina. He praised China in foreign policy and hopes for better relations with Afghanistan, the United States and India.




On February 22, 2022, Khan said he wanted to hold a television debate with his Indian counterpart, Narender Modi, to resolve the differences between the two neighbors.




He said this in an interview with Russia's state television network RT on the eve of his teenage two-day visit to Moscow - the first Pakistani prize in more than two decades, where he will speak with President Vladimir Putin and appreciate it. exchange of views on major regional and international issues.


Imran Khan declined Prime Minister Shabaz Sharif's offer

Opposition leader Imran Khan on Monday rejected Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif's offer to have a "big dialogue" with all parties to address the starving country's economic problems, with the government making ridiculous claims about it to cover up the failure.

On Sunday, Prime Minister Sharif stressed the need to enter into a dialogue with key sectors of the economy in order to continue on the path to growth and prosperity. Maryam Nwaz said Imran Khan was more vulnerable to terrorists

Vice President Maryam Nawaz said on Tuesday that former Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan was "more dangerous than terrorists" because she criticized the recent unrest in Pakistan's Tehreek-e-Insaf in Islamabad, the media said.


In a recent interview, Maryam Nawaz said Khan admitted that his party workers were armed, while "no one carried a weapon" at his rallies.


Opposition leader Imran Khan on Monday rejected Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif's offer to hold a "big dialogue" with all parties to address the country's starving economic problems, with the government making ridiculous claims about it to cover up the failure.

On Sunday, Prime Minister Sharif stressed the need to enter into a dialogue with key sectors of the economy in order to continue on the path to growth and prosperity.


Maryam Nwaz said Imran Khan was more vulnerable to terrorists

Vice President Maryam Nawaz said on Tuesday that former Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan was "more dangerous than terrorists" because she criticized the recent unrest in Pakistan's Tehreek-e-Insaf in Islamabad, the media said. In a recent interview, Maryam Nawaz said Khan admitted that his party workers were armed, while "no one carried a weapon" at his rallies.

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