Former Pakistan prime minister Imran Khan was shot in the shin yesterday when his anti-government protest convoy came under attack in the east of the country in what his aides said was a clear assassination attempt by his rivals.
Khan, ousted as prime minister in a parliamentary confidence vote in April, was six days into a protest procession bound for Islamabad, standing and waving to thousands of cheering supporters from the roof of a container truck, when the shots rang out.
Several in his convoy were wounded in the attack in Wazirabad, nearly 200km from the capital. 
Information Minister Marriyum Aurangzeb said a suspect had been arrested.
“It was a clear assassination attempt. Khan was hit but he’s stable. There was a lot of bleeding,” Fawad Chaudhry, a spokesperson for Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party, said.
“If the shooter had not been stopped by people there, the entire PTI leadership would have been wiped out.”
Another Khan aide, Asad Umar, said doctors had told him that their leader was out of danger.
In a video statement, Umar said Khan believed that Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and intelligence official Major-General Faisal Naseer were behind the attack.
Umar did not provide any evidence to back the allegation.
Aurangzeb, who speaks for the government, did not respond to a request for comment on the allegation.
Sharif condemned the shooting and ordered an immediate investigation.
The military’s media wing did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the allegation against Naseer. In a previous statement, the military called the shooting “highly condemnable”.
Khan, 70, had accused the military of backing the plan to oust him from power.
Last week, the military held a news conference to deny the claims.
“I heard a burst of bullet shots after which I saw Imran Khan and his aides fall down on the truck,” witness Qazzafi Butt said.
“Later, a gunman shot a single shot but was grabbed by an activist of Khan’s party.”
In purported footage of the shooting, being run by multiple channels but unverified by Reuters, a man with a handgun is grabbed from behind by one of the people at the gathering. He then tries to flee. TV channels showed a suspected shooter, who looked to be in his twenties or thirties.
He said he wanted to kill Khan and had acted alone.
“He (Khan) was misleading the people, and I couldn’t bear it,” the suspect said in the video.
The information minister confirmed the footage was recorded by police.
No one has yet been charged with the attack.
Khan – who was after his removal from office convicted by Pakistan’s election commission of selling state gifts unlawfully, charges that he denied – had been whipping up large crowds on his way to Islamabad in a campaign to topple Sharif’s government.
One member of Khan’s party said there were reports one person had been killed in the attack.
Handsome and charismatic, Khan first grabbed international attention as a cricketer in the early 1970s. First known as an aggressive fast-paced bowler with a distinctive leaping action, he went on to become one of the world’s best all-rounders and a hero in cricket-mad Pakistan, captaining a team of wayward stars with bleak prospects to one-day World Cup victory in 1992. His first wife, Jemima Goldsmith, who lives in Britain, expressed relief on Twitter. “The news we dread...Thank God he’s okay,” she wrote. “And thank you from his sons to the heroic man in the crowd who tackled the gunman.”
Local media yesterday showed footage of Khan waving to the crowd after being evacuated from his vehicle after the shooting as people ran and shouted.
He was taken to hospital in Lahore as protesters poured out on to streets in some parts of the country and PTI leaders demanded justice. PTI colleague Faisal Javed, who was also wounded and had blood stains on his clothes, told Geo TV from the hospital: “Several of our colleagues are wounded. We heard that one of them is dead.”
Since being ousted, Khan has held rallies across Pakistan, stirring opposition against a government that is struggling to bring the economy out of the crisis that Khan’s administration left it in.
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