Pakistan National Assembly's crucial session on a no-trust motion against embattled Prime Minister Imran Khan was adjourned on Friday without tabling of the resolution, amid vociferous protests from opposition lawmakers.
National Assembly Speaker Asad Qaiser said that the session was adjourned till 4pm on March 28 due to the demise of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf lawmaker Khayal Zaman on February 14.
According to Pakistan's Parliamentary conventions, the first sitting after the death of a lawmaker is limited to the prayers for the departed soul and tributes from fellow lawmakers.
Several prominent opposition members, including Leader of the Opposition in National Assembly Shehbaz Sharif, Pakistan Peoples' Party Chairman Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari and co-chair Asif Ali Zardari were in the house on Friday to participate in the much-anticipated session.
As Speaker Qaiser adjourned the session, opposition leaders started protesting, requesting him to take up the motion but the speaker did not turn their microphones on and retired to his chamber.
The speaker said that the decision on taking up the no-confidence motion would be taken in the next session.
The voting on the resolution should be held at least three to seven days after it has been laid before the National Assembly, according to rules.
The National Assembly Secretariat had issued a 15-point 'Orders of the Day' for the NA session, which included the no-confidence resolution.
Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) leader Khawaja Asif tweeted that out of 163 opposition lawmakers, 159 were present in the house.
It was not clear how many ruling Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf party lawmakers attended the session but the party skipped its parliamentary meeting ahead of the session.
Addressing a press conference outside Parliament House shortly after the session was adjourned, PML-N President Shehbaz Sharif warned that if the no-confidence motion was not allowed to move on Monday, then they would not be responsible for what would come next.
"Asad Qaiser acted as a PTI worker instead of the National Assembly speaker," he said, adding that the opposition would resort to legal and constitutional protests if Qaiser tried to "act as a slave (of PM Khan)".
He also called for the speaker to be tried under Article 6 of the Constitution, which deals with high treason.
"The no-trust motion is going to be our democratic weapon. We will move towards free and fair elections," Bilawal said, adding that the prime minister had lost "his majority and government".
Reacting to Sharif's comments, senior PTI leader and Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi demanded an apology from him for his tirade against the speaker.
"The words you have used against Asad Qaiser are inappropriate and I want you to retract the remarks immediately," he said, adding that the speaker was responsible for conducting proceedings in whatever manner he sees fit.
Qureshi also refuted claims that the government was "running away" from the no-confidence motion. "We will deal with it in a democratic, political, and legal way." Responding to a question from a reporter, he that the opposition was set to receive another surprise on March 27.
Earlier, Information Minister Fawad Chaudhry tried to make light of the proceedings in the assembly by saying: "Nothing else will take place in the assembly session; everything will happen in Gaddafi Stadium." He was apparently referring to the final day of the 3rd Test between Pakistan and Australia.
Meanwhile, Prime Minister Khan asked people to participate in his party's rally in Islamabad on Sunday to convey to opposition parties that their "funeral is being taken out upon which a naya (new) Pakistan is being raised".
Addressing a public gathering in Mansehra, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Khan accused the Opposition of being involved in horse-trading of lawmakers.
Pakistan has been on the edge since Opposition parties on March 8 submitted a no-confidence motion before the National Assembly Secretariat, alleging that the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaaf government led by Prime Minister Khan was responsible for the economic crisis and the spiralling inflation in the country.
Khan, 69, is heading a coalition government and he can be removed if some of the partners decide to switch sides.
He is facing a rebellion by his about two dozen lawmakers and allied parties which are also reluctant to pledge support to him.
Both Khan and his ministers are trying to give the impression that everything was fine and he would come out victorious out of the trial.
No Pakistani prime minister has ever completed a full five-year term in office.
Ringing the alarm bells, Interior Minister Sheikh Rashid said on Thursday that early elections can be held in the country to end the current political uncertainty due to the no-trust motion against Prime Minister Khan. The next general election is due by late 2023.
On Wednesday, Khan had said that he will not resign at any cost and claimed to have a "surprise" up his sleeve for the opposition, even as at least three allies of the ruling coalition have indicated to vote against his government during the no-trust motion.
Both government and opposition politicians have been working overtime to tilt the balance in their favour.
On Thursday, Pakistan's Chief Justice Umar Ata Bandial said that discarding lawmakers' vote during the no-confidence motion against the prime minister would be "insulting" and a member of the National Assembly cannot be barred from voting.
Chief Justice Bandial is heading a five-member larger bench of the apex court to hear a petition by the government to seek guidance from the Supreme Court about the allowing a dissident to vote against party policy and the length of disqualification for going against the party line while voting in the parliament.
The legal battle is part of the political war going between Prime Minister Khan and opposition parties.
The PTI has 155 members in the 342-member National Assembly and needs at least 172 lawmakers on its side to remain in the government.
(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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