Profile: Imran Khan in danger of dropping the ball as prime minister

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Imran Khan lost Muttahida Qaumi Movement-Pakistan (MQM-P) on Wednesday after a series of similar departures ahead of a no-confidence vote expected in the next few days.

The defections have mounted along with questions over his performance, including his government’s management of a struggling economy, beset by double-digit inflation and rising deficits.

Khan, a cricket legend who embarked on a long and difficult journey in politics to become prime minister in 1996, rallied his citizens with a vision of a corruption-free, prosperous country respected on the world stage.

Handsome and charismatic, Khan first grabbed the world’s attention in the early ’70s as an aggressive fast-paced bowler with a distinctive leaping action.

Imran Khan bowling for Pakistan during the 1st Prudential Trophy One Day International between England and Pakistan at Trent Bridge, Nottingham, July 17, 1982. The umpire is David Evans. (Photo by Patrick Eagar/Popperfoto via Getty Images)

He went on to become one of the world’s best all-rounders, and captained a team of wayward stars from bleak prospects to Pakistan’s first and only World Cup win in 1992, urging on them with the famed battle cry to fight “like cornered tigers”.

After retiring from cricket that year, he became known as a philanthropist, raising $25 million to open a cancer hospital in memory of his mother, before foraying into politics with the establishment of Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) in April 1996.

Despite his fame, the PTI languished in the political wilderness, not winning a seat other than Khan’s for 17 years. This period had its dramatic moments, however, with Khan in 2007 escaping house arrest by leaping over a wall amid a crackdown on opposition figures by then military ruler General Pervez Musharraf.

In 2011, Khan began drawing huge crowds of young people disillusioned with endemic corruption, chronic electricity shortages and crises in education and unemployment.

Imran Khan gestures upon his arrival during a rally in Lahore on October 30, 2011. A crowd of thousands gathered on October 30, for a rally in Lahore called by Khan to press President Asif Ali Zardari to step down. (Arif Ali/AFP via Getty Images)

He drew even greater backing in the ensuing years with well-educated expatriates leaving their jobs to work for his party and pop musicians and actors joining him on the campaign trail.

His goal, Khan told a gathering of hundreds of thousands of supporters in 2018, was to turn Pakistan from a country with a “small group of wealthy and a sea of poor” into an “example for a humane system, a just system, for the world, of what an Islamic welfare state is”.

That year, after 22 years in politics, he was at long last victorious, marking a rare ascension by a sporting hero to head of state. Observers cautioned, however, that his biggest enemy was his own rhetoric having raised his supporters’ hopes sky-high.

STAR CRICKETER TO REFORMER

Born in 1952, the son of a civil engineer, Imran Ahmed Khan Niazi described himself as a shy kid who grew up with four sisters in an affluent urban Pashtun family in Lahore.

After a privileged education in Lahore, during which his cricketing skills became evident, he went on to the University of Oxford where he graduated with a degree in Philosophy, Politics, and Economics.

As his cricket career flourished, he developed a colourful reputation in London in the late 1970s. In 1995, he married Jemima Goldsmith, daughter of business tycoon James Goldsmith. The couple, who had two sons together, divorced in 2004.

LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM: In this picture taken July 18, 1996, Imran Khan is accompanied by his wife Jemima as he arrives at the High Court in London. (STR/AFP via Getty Images)

A second brief marriage to TV journalist Reham Nayyar Khan in 2015 also ended in divorce.

His third marriage to Bushra Bibi, a spiritual leader whom Khan had come to know during his visits to the 13th-century shrine of Fariduddin Ganjshakar in Pakpattan, in 2018 reflected his deepening interest in Sufism — a form of Islamic practice that emphasises spiritual closeness to God.

Once in power, Khan embarked on his plan of building a “welfare” state modelled on what he said was an ideal system dating back to the heyday of Islam, some 14 centuries earlier.

His government made a number of key appointments based on qualifications and not political favours and sought to reform hiring in the bureaucracy and civil service.

Other measures included making it easier for citizens to lodge complaints and the introduction of universal healthcare for the poor in one province with plans to expand the programme nationally.

The government also began a project to plant 10 billion trees to reverse decades of deforestation.

To bolster a long-crippled economy, Khan made a significant u-turn in policy and secured an IMF bailout for Pakistan and set lofty, albeit unmet goals, to expand tax collection.

But his anti-corruption drive was also heavily criticised as a tool for sidelining political opponents — many of whom were imprisoned on charges of graft.

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