Pakistan’s opposition alliance, Tehreek Tahafuz-i-Ayeen Pakistan (TTAP), began a sit-in at the Parliament House on Friday following reports that PTI founder Imran Khan has only 15% vision left in his right eye. The protest started after Friday prayers and continued late into the night. TTAP chief Mehmood Khan Achakzai said they plan to stay overnight and continue longer if needed, joking, “the entire Ramazan will be spent staging sit-ins.” The alliance demands Imran be admitted to Al-Shifa Hospital immediately for treatment under his own doctors’ supervision. PTI leaders, including Asad Qaiser and Barrister Gohar Ali Khan, joined the protest despite government blockades and tight security around Parliament. Mustafa Nawaz Khokar of TTAP accused authorities of closing all roads and trapping opposition MPs inside parliamentary lodges to stop protests. Meanwhile, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa's Chief Minister Sohail Afridi and party members were reportedly stopped by police and staged a sit-in outside KP House, with claims of police roughing up protesters. PTI also accused the government of using force against parliamentarians and delaying written Supreme Court orders to allow Imran’s proper medical examination. Imran’s sister Aleema Khan criticized the delay, saying, “Given the urgency and the risk to his eyesight, why has the CJP delayed issuing the written orders?” Parliamentary Affairs Minister Dr Tariq Fazal Chaudhry said the government is ready to take Imran wherever he wants for treatment. He denied the blockade claims, calling the issue medical, not political. He assured, “There will be no negligence in the matter.” The opposition party Awaam Pakistan joined the sit-in, stressing that denying timely medical care to Imran Khan is “immoral, inhumane and illegal.” They vowed to stay until he receives proper care. The protest continues as demands for urgent and specialist medical treatment grow stronger amid tense political standoffs.