An edited video of Ali Amin Gandapur — a politician from the party of Pakistan’s former leader Imran Khan — surfaced online with the false claim it showed him apologising for violent protests that swept the country after Khan’s arrest in May 2023. The original video in fact shows him saying that he would apologise if there was evidence to show his involvement in the unrest.
“It is my mistake and it was a mistake. I went to Corps Commander House Peshawar and apologised,” read an Urdu-language post on X, formerly Twitter, that shared the video on August 11.
“Imran Khan has also made mistakes. He should admit his mistakes and apologise.”
The post showed a video of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) senior leader Ali Amin Gandapur speaking to reporters outside Adiala prison south of the capital Islamabad.
Former Pakistani prime minister and ex-cricketing star Imran Khan has been languishing in the jail since August 2023 when he was convicted of graft.
His arrest on May 9 that year sparked violent protests across Pakistan which saw unprecedented anger towards the military — which Khan had criticised after he was ousted in 2022 (archived link).
Protesters stormed the residence of the corps commander in Lahore and laid siege to a gate of the army’s general headquarters in Rawalpindi. In Peshawar, a mob razed the Chaghi monument — a mountain-shaped sculpture honouring the location of Pakistan’s first nuclear test (archived link).
Khan was slapped with a fresh charge of inciting riots, while Gandapur was accused of involvement and later released on bail (archived link) .
The video shared online appears to show Gandapur apologising and repeatedly saying “Yes, it was my mistake”.