Punjab home minister denies reports ex-PM Khan aide tortured by police

The undated photo shows Dr. Shahbaz Gill, a senior Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) leader and former prime minister Imran Khan’s chief of staff. (Social media)
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Updated 16 August 2022
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Punjab home minister denies reports ex-PM Khan aide tortured by police

  • Gill was arrested last Tuesday afternoon over televised comments the media regulator says were “seditious”
  • Gill, who alleges torture by police officials, on Monday moved Islamabad High Court against the sedition case

ISLAMABAD: Punjab Home Minister Col (retd) Muhammad Hashim on Tuesday denied reports Dr. Shahbaz Gill, a senior Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) leader and former prime minister Imran Khan’s chief of staff, had been tortured in police custody.

Gill, who alleges torture at the hands of police officials, on Monday moved the Islamabad High Court against a sedition case filed against him, accusing the police of charging him at the behest of the federal government headed by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif.

Gill was arrested last Tuesday, a day after he spoke on a talk show aired by ARY News and asked army officers not to follow orders of their top command if they were “against the sentiments of the masses.” ARY News has since also been taken off air by the electronic media regulator which has called Gill’s comments “seditious” and tantamount to inciting mutiny against the military.

Speaking to journalists outside Central Jail Adiala in Rawalpindi where Gill is imprisoned, the home minister said he had met the Khan aide and he was in good health. Hashim said he would brief the PTI chairperson on Gill’s health condition personally.

“He is perfectly alright in the jail,” the minister added. “There is no question of him being beaten up.”

Meanwhile, Provincial Minister for Cooperatives, Environment Protection and Parliamentary Affairs Muhammad Basharat Raja said officers of Adiala jail were being removed “on their criminal silence about illegal actions being done with political prisoner Shahbaz Gill.”

On Friday, local media reported Gill telling the judge at a local court that police had kept him awake at night and tortured him, saying investigators had not carried out a medical examination and lawyers were not being allowed to meet him.

Former Prime Minister Imran Khan took to the Twitter last week and condemned what he said was “torture being inflicted on Shahbaz Gill.”

“Under what law & under who’s orders is this being done? If he broke any law then he shd be given a fair hearing,” Khan said. “All laws are being violated with impunity.”

 


Imran Khan's sons fear for his health, seek visas to visit him in Pakistan

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Imran Khan's sons fear for his health, seek visas to visit him in Pakistan

  • Pakistani authorities say medical procedures are under way and reject opposition claims of neglect
  • Khan's sons say he should be moved to a proper medical facility and have access to private doctors

LONDON: Imran Khan's sons say they fear for their father's deteriorating health in a Pakistani ​jail and are seeking permission to visit the former prime minister, urging authorities to grant access after more than two years apart.

Khan's lawyer told Pakistan's Supreme Court last week that the ex-cricketer had lost significant vision in his right eye while in custody. A medical board said on Monday the swelling had reduced after treatment and his vision had improved.

Speaking to Reuters in London, where they are based, Khan's sons, Kasim and Sulaiman, 26 and 29, said they were uncertain about the medical report. They spoke to their father on Thursday for the first ‌time since September.

They ‌said their father usually avoids discussing his health, but during ​the ‌call ⁠he expressed ​frustration, ⁠saying he had been denied treatment for his eye for a few months.

"It's hard not to feel low at times because we've been away from him so long," Kasim said of his father, whom he and his brother call 'Abba', adding that he should be moved to a proper medical facility and have access to his private doctors.

Authorities say medical procedures are under way and reject opposition claims of neglect. The Supreme Court has sought details of his treatment.

JAILED SINCE AUGUST 2023

Khan, ⁠73, has been jailed since August 2023 after convictions he and his ‌Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party call politically motivated.

Since his 2022 ouster ‌in a no-confidence vote, he has faced multiple cases, including ​over state gifts and an unlawful marriage. Some ‌convictions have been suspended or overturned, with appeals pending. He denies wrongdoing.

Kasim and Sulaiman were ‌raised in Britain after Khan's divorce from their mother, British socialite and filmmaker Jemima Goldsmith. They have not seen their father since November 2022 after he survived an assassination attempt. They said they applied for visas last month but have yet to receive a response.

"Maybe the establishment is worried that if we ‌go and see him it would create more noise, and just more attention to his situation," Sulaiman said, when asked why there ⁠could be a delay.

The Pakistani ⁠embassy in London and Pakistan's foreign ministry did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Kasim said their immediate concern was his health, but there were other pressing issues, including "his freedom, abiding by correct human rights processes and also the rule of law and just ensuring that he's allowed a proper, fair trial".

Broadcast outlets have been restricted from airing Khan's name and speeches or even showing his image. Only a single court photograph has been publicly available since his imprisonment.

PTI swept to power in 2018 and retains a large support base across key provinces.

For four days, PTI supporters have blocked major highways linking Khyber Pakhtunkhwa to Punjab, stranding thousands of vehicles and affecting fuel and food supplies in some areas.

Asked if they had a ​message for Khan's supporters, Kasim asked them ​to "keep faith and keep fighting", adding: "It's the same kind of message we're trying to hold on to."