Imran Khan deplaned, interrogated at Toronto airport
27
October, 2012
Chairman Pakistan Tehrik-e-Insaf , Imran Khan, was deplaned from a New York bound flight at Toronto Pearson International Airport, Geo News reported.
Sources
told Geo News that PTI chief and his entourage were deplaned and
interrogated by immigration authorities.
Khan
was questioned over his stance against US drone attacks in Pakistan's
tribal areas, the sources added.
After
a while he and other PTI leaders were allowed to catch the next plane
to New York.
Pakistan's
Imran Khan Slams U.S. War On Terror
'A
military solution is a disaster for the U.S.,' Khan tells CBC's Evan
Solomon
Video
Interview - CBC News - Posted October 27, 2012
The
war on terror has been a costly failure and the use of drones is
ratcheting up anti-Americanism and militants, says a popular
politician vying to be Pakistan's next leader.
In
an interview on CBC News Network's Power & Politics, Imran Khan
said he's the only leader promoting a peaceful solution to the
decade-long conflict — and that his push for talks with the Taliban
has wrongly branded him a pro-jihadist.
The
founder of the Movement of Justice Party told host Evan Solomon he
wants to spread the word to governments around the world —
including Canada's — that much blood has been spilled and money
thrown "down the drain" in a costly war that will only be
resolved through negotiations with the Taliban.
"Trillions
of dollars spent. God knows how many hundreds and thousands of people
killed. Is the world any safer?" he said.
Khan,
visiting Toronto to speak about his country and raise funds for his
political party, has said in the past he would shoot down American
drones in Pakistan's tribal areas. He told Solomon that if he's
elected, he would try to convince Western political leaders they are
driving anti-Americanism and helping militants, and if they
continued, he would take his case to the United Nations to have it
recognized as a breach of sovereignty.
U.S.
President Barack Obama and Republican presidential candidate Mitt
Romney both support the use of drones as a tightly controlled
strategy that pre-empts more intrusive military actions.
Khan,
once a famous cricket star, entered politics in 1996 and has been
slowly building up a base of supporters with his outspoken
condemnation of the war in neighbouring Afghanistan.
'Taliban
Khan'
While
he’s been dubbed "Taliban Khan," Khan insists he is not
promoting violent tactics, but a peaceful resolution through dialogue
with the people in Taliban tribal areas.
"Military
strategy by itself has failed, and sadly, people like us who advocate
a political settlement are called pro-Taliban," he said. "If
you win them over to your side, you win the war. If you push them on
to the other side, it's a never-ending war."
Accused
of failing to condemn the Taliban shooting of 14-year-old Malala
Yousafzai, he rejected the claims as "blatant propaganda."
If
elected, he said, he would be a friend of the U.S., but not "a
stooge."
"A
friend should tell the other friend what is good for them. A military
solution is a disaster for the U.S., it's a disaster for the people
of Pakistan."
Asked
by Solomon which U.S. presidential candidate he'd prefer to see in
office, Obama or Romney, Khan remained coy.
"I
would like that president to win the election who gives peace a
chance, who stops this war on terror which is destroying my country,
which is causing more anti-Americanism," he said.
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