Ex-PM Khan announces rallies to support Pakistan’s chief justice ahead of Islamabad court appearance

Former Pakistan's prime minister Imran Khan speaks during an interview with AFP at his residence in Lahore on March 15, 2023. Former Pakistan prime Minister Imran Khan on March 15 said the government wanted him behind bars in order to stop him taking part in elections due later this year. (AFP/File)
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Updated 04 May 2023
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Ex-PM Khan announces rallies to support Pakistan’s chief justice ahead of Islamabad court appearance

  • The former prime minister is scheduled to appear before the Islamabad High Court to seek bail in eight cases
  • Khan maintains members of the country’s ruling coalition do not want to hold national elections in Pakistan

ISLAMABAD: Former prime minister Imran Khan on Thursday announced to hold rallies in different urban centers of Pakistan on Saturday to express solidarity with the Supreme Court chief justice who has been criticized by the government for his recent rulings while leaving Lahore to attend court proceedings in the federal capital.

Since his ouster from power in April last year, the ex-PM has held public rallies to force the country’s ruling coalition to hold early national elections. The government insists the polls will be held in October after the expiry of the five-year term of the national and provincial legislative bodies, though it has held three rounds of talks with the opposition PTI over the issue.

“I’ll lead a rally in Lahore,” he said while sitting in a wheelchair. “Rallies will be held in Islamabad, Rawalpindi and Peshawar. All these rallies will be held on Saturday to tell the chief justice that the whole nation stands with him.”

A three-member apex court bench led by Chief Justice Umar Ata Bandial ruled on April 4 that polls in Punjab province should be held on May 14 while directing the federal authorities to release funds and provide enough security to enable to the election commission to make necessary arrangements.

However, the government has refused to provide the funds.

The PTI on Wednesday informed the court through a petition that its negotiations with the government to develop a consensus over a unanimous date for national elections had failed while urging the judges it to implement their order to hold the Punjab elections on May 14.

“They [the government] are running away from the elections,” Khan said about Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s coalition government.

“As inflation and unemployment have wreaked havoc in Pakistan, they are afraid of the elections and going against the constitution and the chief justice,” he added while urging the public across the country to come out in the streets on Saturday to express solidarity with the chief justice.

Earlier on Wednesday, Islamabad High Court directed Khan to appear in person on Thursday (today), or else his petition seeking pre-arrest bail in eight cases would be rejected.

Khan’s counsel Barrister Salman Safdar informed the court that owing to pain in his client’s leg, the former premier would not be able to appear before the court and sought an exemption.
However, the court refused to the plea.

“We respect our judiciary,” Khan said while leaving for Islamabad from Lahore, pointing toward the swelling on his foot.

Khan sustained a bullet wound to his leg last year while leading an anti-government caravan to the federal capital.


Pakistan, seven Muslim nations back Palestinian technocratic body, stress Gaza-West Bank unity

Updated 15 January 2026
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Pakistan, seven Muslim nations back Palestinian technocratic body, stress Gaza-West Bank unity

  • The National Committee for the Administration of the Gaza Strip was announced on January 14
  • Muslim nations call for consolidation of the ceasefire and unimpeded humanitarian aid into Gaza

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan and seven other Muslim-majority countries on Thursday welcomed the formation of a temporary Palestinian technocratic body to administer Gaza, stressing that it must manage daily civilian affairs while preserving the institutional and territorial link between the Gaza Strip and the West Bank amid the ongoing peace efforts.

In a joint statement, the foreign ministers of Pakistan, Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Türkiye, Indonesia and the United Arab Emirates said the newly announced National Committee for the Administration of the Gaza Strip would play a central role during the second phase of a broader peace plan aimed at ending the war and paving the way for Palestinian self-governance.

“The Ministers emphasize the importance of the National Committee commencing its duties in managing the day-to-day affairs of the people of Gaza, while preserving the institutional and territorial link between the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, ensuring the unity of Gaza, and rejecting any attempts to divide it,” the statement said.

The committee, announced on Jan. 14, is a temporary transitional body established under United Nations Security Council Resolution 2803 and is to operate in coordination with the Palestinian Authority, the ministers said.

The statement said the move forms part of the second phase of US President Donald Trump’s Comprehensive Peace Plan for Gaza, which the ministers said they supported, praising Trump’s efforts to end the war, ensure the withdrawal of Israeli forces and prevent the annexation of the occupied West Bank.

The top leaders of all eight Muslim countries attended a meeting with Trump in New York last September, shortly before he unveiled the Gaza peace plan.

The ministers also called for the consolidation of the ceasefire, unimpeded humanitarian aid into Gaza, early recovery and reconstruction and the eventual return of the Palestinian Authority to administer the territory, leading to a just and sustainable peace based on UN resolutions and a two-state solution on pre-1967 lines with East Jerusalem as the Palestinian capital.