Imran Khan. Even during that protest, he had tried hard to transform the PTI chief into not becoming a tool in the hands of undemocratic powers, but his efforts proved to be too feeble to stop him from the disastrous trajectory.
Being a democrat, Hashmi was finally left with no option but to cease his affiliation with the PTI. As he walked out of the PTI, he started blowing the whistle on the real agenda of the sit-in by spelling out graphic details, which included the attack on the Prime Minister House and other national installations located close to the D-Chowk. His famous claim was that Imran Khan had told him that the next Supreme Court chief justice will oust the Nawaz Sharif government.
After saying good-bye to the PTI, Hashmi, as a principled politician, resigned from his National Assembly seat he had won on its ticket. He contested the by-election to it as independent, but lost to PTI contestant Malik Aamir Dogar. The PML-N had not fielded any candidate in the by-polls for Hashmi’s sake and had also not whole-heartedly support him. After leaving the Islami Jamiat-e-Tulba, the student wing of the Jamaat-e-Islami, Hashmi had joined the PML-N and remained with him steadfast for several years. The only time he departed from it was in 2011 when he switched to the PTI.
He was so much trusted leader of the PML-N that when Nawaz Sharif and other members of his family went into exile on December 10, 2000 during Pervez Musharraf’s era, he was made chief of the party and Raja Zafarul Haq was appointed its chairman. In Sharifs’ absence from Pakistan, he ran the party in the dictatorial rule.
In 2003, Hashmi was charged with a trumped up treason case and sentenced to seven-year rigorous imprisonment. Later the Lahore High Court acquitted him in June 2010 saying that no concrete evidence or witnesses were available to suggest his involvement in any act of treason. He was released on bail in 2007 after serving 3 years and 9 months in prison.
Before being accused of this offence, Hashmi had said that he had received information from “credible sources” that a case had been prepared against him for distributing a letter that, he claimed, had been written by Musharraf establishment. While referring to that letter, he had stated that it was not one but he had been receiving many similar communications for the past many months. The then Information Minister, Sheikh Rashid Ahmed, had described the alleged letter as fake. Hashmi had said he was ready to go to jail and had already packed up his luggage. “I would not bow before a military dictator. I am not against the army as an institution but against those who had made the military controversial.”
While leaving the PML-N, he had stated that the relationship between him and Nawaz Sharif continued to deteriorate, “I was shunned by him and he stopped asking me for anything on anything. I kept asking till the very last minute why I was moved into a corner. I am not happy to leave the party, and if they are teary eyed about it, so am I. The decision to switch to PTI is neither impulsive, nor emotional as I kept my emotions aside and thought about it for almost 18 months, consulting other members of the party and my constituency over it before deciding.”