Umar has confirmed that Imran will not be attending the APC meeting.
According to the ECP, elections need to be held, and preparations can be completed in fewer than 54 days.

Imran Khan, the leader of the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI), would not attend the All Parties Conference (APC) that Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has convened, according to the party general secretary Asad Umar.
Imran will not be attending the conference, according to Umar, who made the announcement while speaking to media outside the Lahore High Court (LHC). Umar also questioned how the former premier could support the current administration while phoney cases were being brought against the PTI.
On February 7, PM Shehbaz convened an APC and asked all of the national political figures, including Imran Khan, to reflect on the escalating menace of terrorism and extremism.
Days after the Peshawar police lines carnage, in which a suicide bomber killed more than 100 people by blowing himself up during noon prayers inside a mosque, the prime minister decided to summon the APC to discuss ways to overcome the current national challenges and invite all national-level political leaders, including the PTI chief.
After the APS massacre, the previous prime minister Nawaz Sharif called a multi-party meeting in Peshawar and encouraged all parties with representatives in parliament, including the PTI, to work together and reaffirm their commitment to combating terrorism and extremism.
Polls must be held by the ECP.
Asad Umar added that the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) was required to hold elections and that the current state of the economy could not affect them. In Punjab, polls would be announced by Thursday, he added.
The PTI leader announced that holding by-elections in 90 days had been “approved” and gave party members instructions on how to be ready for the election.
At the upcoming hearing on the election date, he hoped that the outcome will be in “our favour.” The governor of Punjab and the electoral watchdog, he said, agreed that the polls should take place within 90 days, but neither was prepared to provide a specific date.
He claimed that although the ECP stated explicitly that 54 days were needed for preparation, the government was purposefully attempting to raise doubt.