Francis Pike

Pakistan is on the brink

Credit: Getty Images

On Tuesday I speculated that Pakistan’s former Prime Minister Imran Khan, now the opposition leader, was so popular that he might have to be shot by his enemies to prevent him from coming back to power. This was not a throwaway statement. After Sri Lanka and Lebanon, whose political murder rate since the second world war has been off the charts, Pakistan with 44 political murders comes a clear third, not including the peripheral hundreds if not thousands who have died in bombings.

As if in sync with my warning, Tuesday afternoon saw another political murder in Pakistan. Majid Satti, the leader of Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party in Rawalpindi was gunned down by a group of armed assassins. Two days previously, the PTI politician Nargis Baloch was shot dead outside Quetta’s Balochistan University by a gunman riding pillion on a motorbike – a method of assassination popular across the subcontinent, particularly in Sri Lanka.

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