Posters begging Pakistan's powerful army chief to launch a coup appeared in major cities including the capital Islamabad overnight, raising eyebrows in a country that has been ruled by the military for more than half its history.
The posters, which also appeared in Lahore, Karachi and the garrison city of Rawalpindi as well as several army-run cantonment areas, were placed there by "Move on Pakistan", a largely-unknown political party founded in 2013.
"Talk of leaving has become old, for God's sake come now," scream the posters, referring to General Raheel Sharif's decision to step down at the end of his tenure this year.
They feature a large photograph of the mustachioed general.
"Dictatorship is much better than this corrupt government," Ali Hashmi, chief organiser behind Move on Pakistan, told AFP Tuesday.
"The way General Raheel Sharif has dealt with terrorism and corruption, there is no guarantee that the next man would be as effective as him," he said.
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