Ex-PM Khan’s aide remanded in police custody for two days in sedition case

Police officers escort Shahbaz Gill, center in blue shirt, a political aide to former Pakistani prime minister Imran Khan, after a court appearance, in Islamabad, Pakistan, on August 22, 2022. (AP)
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Updated 23 August 2022
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Ex-PM Khan’s aide remanded in police custody for two days in sedition case

  • Police produced Dr Shahbaz Gill before a magistrate after he was discharged from hospital
  • In Karachi, court grants transit remand of news anchor for 'falsely' accusing Islamabad police

ISLAMANAD/KARACHI: An Islamabad district court on Monday remanded former prime minister Imran Khan's chief of staff, Dr Shahbaz Gill, in the custody of Islamabad police for another two days to investigate him in a case involving charges of sedition and incitement to mutiny.

Gill was arrested on August 9, a day after he made controversial comments on a television show, asking army officers not to follow orders of their top command if they were “against the sentiments of the masses.”

The country’s national media regulator described his statement as “seditious” and said it was tantamount to inciting revolt within the military.

Gill, who has since been in custody, was admitted to hospital last Wednesday over breathing issues. On Monday, the police produced him before a judicial magistrate after being discharged from Islamabad's Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences (PIMS) hospital and requested the judge to remand him in custody for eight day

During the hearing, Gill informed Judicial Magistrate Malik Aman he was being pressurized to give a statement against ex-PM Khan.

“I have given no such statement till today,” he told the judge. “Even if a written statement of me surfaces after today, it should not be considered my statement as it would be a statement taken from me through torture.”




Police officers escort Shahbaz Gill, center in blue shirt, a political aide to former Pakistani prime minister Imran Khan, after a court appearance, in Islamabad, Pakistan, on August 22, 2022. (AP)

Gill pleaded with the judge to send him to jail, assuring that he would cooperate in the investigation.

Gill’s lawyers, Babar Awan and Faisal Fareed, opposed the police request for physical remand, saying his client had been "tortured" and "stripped off" during a previous stint in police remand. 

“What image of Pakistan are we showing to the world,” the lawyer asked. “What are we showing to our generations?”  

Fareed also presented Gill's medical report, prepared by Adiala Jail doctors, and repeated that his client was “tortured.” Islamabad police deny the allegation.  

The 14-page medical report, a copy of which is available with Arab News, was based on Gill’s judicial remand in jail from August 12 to 17. The report said bruises were found on the left and right side of the suspect’s back, the back of his left hand, and on his buttocks.

The court granted the police two-day remand of the accused and adjourned the hearing.

Separately, the Islamabad High Court (IHC) reserved its verdict on a petition filed by Khan's Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party, seeking to abolish Gill's physical remand.  

In another development, a judicial magistrate in the southern Pakistani port city of Karachi remanded a local news anchor, Jameel Farooui, in custody for “falsely” accusing Islamabad police on his YouTube channel of “physically and sexually” assaulting Gill.

"In the given situation, the police officers request seems justified to the extent of granting the accused to transit police custody remand; and hence, accused is remanded to such police custody for three days," the Karachi South magistrate said.  

"I.O. (investigating officer) is directed to produce the accused before the Magistrate according to law under intimation to this Court; and, if in the meantime before reaching the Court for whatever justifiable reasons, the period of remand ends, he shall seek fresh remand from the nearest Magistrate in surroundings for further proceeding."

In a statement on Monday, the Karachi Union of Journalists condemned the “disappearance” of the news anchor after his “arrest.”

“[Farooqui] was arrested while he was going to Bol News [a local TV channel] from his residence in Gulshan-e-Iqbal to participate in a program,” the statement said.

“The vlog by Jameel Farooqui is objectionable and in contradiction to journalistic and moral traditions,” it added. “However, the way he has been made to disappear is not only against the basic human rights but also in violation to the basic right of defense of an accused.”

Reacting to the development, senior leader of Khan’s political party, Shireen Mazari, condemned the arrest while accusing the government of being “on the rampage against journalists.”

Previously, Ammad Yousaf, the news director at ARY News, the channel that aired Gill’s comment, was also arrested from his residence in Karachi before being released on the directives of a local court. ARY News has been off air since Aug 8.


Pakistan’s president defends ongoing strikes in Afghanistan, urges Kabul to dismantle militants

Updated 02 March 2026
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Pakistan’s president defends ongoing strikes in Afghanistan, urges Kabul to dismantle militants

  • Afghanistan on Thursday launched attacks in retaliation for Pakistani airstrikes the previous Sunday
  • Pakistan’s military says it is only targeting Afghan military installations to avoid civilian casualties

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s president on Monday defended his country’s ongoing military strikes in neighboring Afghanistan, saying Islamabad tried all forms of diplomacy before targeting militants operating from Afghan territory, and called on the Taliban government in Kabul to disarm groups responsible for attacks in Pakistan.

Pakistan earlier said it is in “open war” with Afghanistan, alarming the international community. The border area remains a stronghold for militant organizations including Al-Qaeda and the Daesh (Islamic State) group.

“(The Afghan Taliban) must choose to dismantle the terror groups that survive on conflict and its war economy,” Asif Ali Zardari said during a speech to lawmakers, adding that “no state accepts serial attacks on its soil.”

Afghanistan on Thursday launched attacks in retaliation for Pakistani airstrikes the previous Sunday. Since then, Pakistan has carried out operations along the border, with Information Minister Attaullah Tarar claiming the killing of 435 Afghan forces and the capture of 31 Afghan positions.

Kabul has denied such claims.

In Afghanistan, the deputy government spokesman Hamdullah Fitrat said Pakistan’s military fired mortar shells at a refugee camp in eastern Kunar province, killing three children and injuring three others.

Afghanistan’s defense ministry said Afghan forces carried out strikes targeting a Pakistani military facility near Paktia province, causing “substantial losses and heavy casualties.”

Pakistan’s military did not respond to questions. It has said Pakistan is only targeting Afghan military installations to avoid civilian casualties.

Pakistan has witnessed a surge of violence in recent months and blames it on the outlawed Pakistani Taliban, known as Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan or TTP. It operates both inside Pakistan and from Afghan territory.
Islamabad accuses Afghanistan’s Taliban government of providing safe havens for the TTP, which Kabul denies.

The latest cross-border fighting ended a ceasefire brokered by Qatar and Turkiye in October. The two sides failed to reach a permanent agreement during talks in Istanbul.

Zardari reiterated Pakistan’s call for talks, saying, “We have never walked away from dialogue.”

The Pakistani leader again accused Afghanistan of acting as a proxy for India by sheltering militant groups.

“Stop being used by another country as a battlefield for their ambitions,” he said.

Zardari cited a recent report from the United Nations Security Council’s monitoring team that described the presence of militant groups in Afghanistan as an extra-regional threat.