PTI Chairman Imran Khan has predicted that there will a revolution in Pakistan sooner than later, and he will become the prime minister after the general elections. In an interview to a British newspaper, the PTI leader said anger against the incumbents was massively mounting, and expressed his great concern at growing missile attacks by the US, amid a continuously down sliding economy. He said despite the fact that all political parties had programmed their turns, yet none would be allowed to take over. To a question regarding his marriage, he regretted that although he had always aspired to marry a Pakistani woman, yet he fell in for Jamima, which ended in a sad divorce, because of his professional preoccupations.
Meanwhile, addressing the Pakistan executive group, Khan said the 20th Amendment was implemented over mutual, personal and vested interests, not for the masses. He also declared the upcoming wave of PTI unstoppable, and declared Pakistani expatriates as a valuable asset of nation, who could play an important part in the forthcoming general elections. He said the expatriates would be the main source and strength of forthcoming revolution, in presence of a successful and conducive democratic system. Khan said only a strong Pakistan would be able to sustain a successful foreign policy. He said Pakistan-India relations could get a boost through successfully resolving core issue of Kashmir and trade between two nations.