PTI preparations for Peshawar power show in full swing

PESHAWAR - Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insafs 'tsunami is seemingly set to make the titanic of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa government sink by holding a huge public gathering in Peshawar on November 25. A number of prominent political and social figures will formally join the PTI on the occasion. In order to render PTIs show successful, corner meetings and preparations are underway in full swing. Various committees have already been formed for the purpose. The public meeting will be held at Jhagra village, situated in the suburbs of the provincial metropolis. Chairman PTI Imran Khan, along with other central and provincial office-bearers of the party, will address to the gathering. PTIs provincial leadership considers November 25 show a 'tsunami, which, according to them, will sink the titanic of provincial government in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. Hundreds of thousands of people and PTI workers are expected to attend the gathering. A huge procession will proceed to Jhagra from GT Road in Peshawar city. Speaking to various public meetings, the PTI ex-provincial president Asad Qaiser has claimed that PTI will give a 'new Pakistan to its people by providing them with justice, jobs, security, peace and respect, saying that that was why people were joining the PTI. He said people wanted a prosperous Pakistan. To mobilise maximum people to participate in the scheduled show, PTI has launched an advertisement drive in local and national media and it is expected that not only the PTI workers from Peshawar, but also from across the province, will attend the gathering. The PTI gathering is claimed to become one of the biggest shows of power the PTI has so far arranged in KP. Moreover, various gigantic banners and posters, carrying the pictures of Imran Khan and other party leaders, have been displayed in Peshawar and at its entry and exit points. PTI ex-provincial secretary information Zahid Hussain, while speaking at a public gathering in Urmar Pauyan, said the governments days were numbered as it completely failed to deliver. He said a sense of insecurity and deprivation deepened among the masses, and they wanted a change through votes. Thus, he said, the government should announce a date for holding fresh elections, otherwise, no one could stop a revolution, which would ruin each and everything.

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