OKARA: Senior Vice President of the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N), Maryam Nawaz, launched her party’s election campaign on Monday with a public gathering in Okara.
Maryam Nawaz, speaking at the gathering, said that she was sent to head the Okara demonstration by her father, Nawaz Sharif, and the leader of the PML-N.
During the speech, she threw a litany of accusations at Imran Khan, accusing him of planning and carrying out the deadly attacks on May 9. She made fun of the founder of the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) for stealing his election emblem, arguing that a “baton” should be used instead of a bat.
The chief organizer of the PML-N also called his party terrorists. “A terrorist group could not be given a political party’s electoral symbol,” she stated.
“What goes around comes around,” she remarked, adding that “your electoral symbol should be the petrol bomb you threw on police officers or the watch you stole.”
“You attacked military installations with a baton, not a bat, as your electoral symbol. It’s taken the baton out of your grasp,” she insisted.
According to Maryam, the PTI’s problems are a result of what they sown against other people. She mentioned that Imran was accustomed to having blue eyes. She stated neither the PML-N nor Nawaz were pursuing revenge from the PTI, she remarked.
She added that the person who used to call others thieves was the one who took watches from the Toshakhana.
Maryam asserted, “It is no longer possible to obtain (desired) verdicts by calling the mother-in-law of the judge,” and she suggested that they should instruct their attorneys to come to court prepared.
Maryam stated they would have believed that by turning off the RTS button, they might win an election similar to the one in 2018. She stated that the facility was no longer accessible. She added that his forgeries and umpires were both revealed.
She used her speech to entice the rally attendees to vote for the PML-N, claiming that the more and faster they did so, the sooner they would experience prosperity, a decline in inflation, and a deflation of utility prices.