Ex-PM Khan’s legal team says denied access in jail as controversy surrounds his trial and arrest

Policemen stand guard at the Attock prison post where Pakistan's former Prime Minister Imran Khan is being held for three years in Attock on August 6, 2023. (AFP)
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Updated 06 August 2023
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Ex-PM Khan’s legal team says denied access in jail as controversy surrounds his trial and arrest

  • The former PM’s legal team says it wanted to provide him clothes and other amenities, inquire about his well-being
  • Khan’s close aide says the ex-premier was ‘manhandled’ and ‘thrown’ into a vehicle by those who came to arrest him

ISLAMABAD: Former prime minister Imran Khan’s legal team was not getting access to him in jail, said one of his spokespersons on Saturday night, adding it was the right of his lawyers to meet him in prison and inquire about his well-being.

Khan was barred from holding public office in a case involving the illegal sale of state gifts by the country’s election commission last year in October, which referred the matter to the higher judiciary while recommending holding criminal proceedings against him.

A trial court in Pakistan’s federal capital, Islamabad, announced a three-year imprisonment for him in the matter, commonly known as the Toshakhana – or state repository – case, before the law enforcement agencies arrested him from his Lahore residence and took him to a prison away from the city.

“We have tried our best to meet Imran Khan by contacting the superintendent [jail], Attock, and the additional home secretary,” Naeem Haider Panjutha, the former PM’s spokesperson on legal affairs, said in a short video message. “However, we have not received any response from either of them.”

“We have told both of them that we need to get the power of attorney and other documents signed by Mr. Khan since we have to move various applications and challenge different [court] orders,” he continued. “We also have to challenge the Toshakhana verdict that came today. However, we have not been allowed to meet him so far.”

Panjutha said Khan’s legal team also wanted to visit him since they were concerned about his well-being and wanted to provide him with clothes, food, and other amenities.

However, he informed that the authorities had not given them a “green signal,” though it was his legal team’s right to meet the former prime minister while he was in prison.

 

 

One of Khan’s close aides, Zulfi Bokhari, also circulated a video message, saying it was a shame for the country and its judiciary that the former premier’s legal team was not given an opportunity to present its arguments in the Toshakhana case.

He also questioned how the judge managed to type up a 35-page judgment within 30 minutes when a document as big could take several hours to write.

Similar concerns were also raised by some members of the legal community who pointed out that Khan could not have been arrested so promptly on the orders of an Islamabad court from his Lahore residence, if due process of law had been followed.

Bokhari revealed that law enforcement personnel broke into Khan’s residence through the back door, adding they beat four or five of his staff members.

He informed that Khan was also roughed up by officials who had arrived at his residence to arrest him.

“They grabbed him, manhandled him, and threw him in a car,” he said.

Bokhari reiterated that Khan’s arrest would be contested and appealed in a high court and the supreme court while urging the local and international media outlets to question whether it was right to detain the PTI leader without a fair trial.

He maintained that the outgoing government and other state institutions were striving to eliminate Khan from the political landscape of Pakistan.

However, Pakistan’s information minister Marriyum Aurangzeb said earlier in the day Khan’s arrest was not politically motivated and was made since he was refusing to respond to the charges against him.


Security forces kill four militants in Pakistan’s volatile southwest, military says

Updated 13 January 2026
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Security forces kill four militants in Pakistan’s volatile southwest, military says

  • Balochistan, Pakistan’s largest province by land area bordering Iran and Afghanistan, has long been the site of a low-level insurgency
  • The Balochistan government has recently established a threat assessment center to strengthen early warning, prevent ‘terrorism’ incidents

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani security forces gunned down four militants in an intelligence-based operation in the southwestern Balochistan province, the military said on Tuesday.

The operation was conducted in Balochistan’s Kalat district on reports about the presence of militants, according to the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), the Pakistani military’s media wing.

The “Indian-sponsored militants” were killed in an exchange of fire during the operation, while weapons and ammunition were also recovered from the deceased, who remained actively involved in numerous militant activities.

“Sanitization operations are being conducted to eliminate any other Indian-sponsored terrorist found in the area,” the ISPR said in a statement.

There was no immediate response from New Delhi to the statement.

Balochistan, Pakistan’s largest province by land area bordering Iran and Afghanistan, has long been the site of a low-level insurgency involving Baloch separatist groups, including the Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA) and the Balochistan Liberation Front (BLF).

Pakistan accuses India of supporting these separatist militant groups and describes them as “Fitna Al-Hindustan.” New Delhi denies the allegation.

The government in Balochistan has also established a state-of-the-art threat assessment center to strengthen early warning and prevention against “terrorism” incidents, a senior official said this week.

“Information that was once scattered is now shared and acted upon in time, allowing the state to move from reacting after incidents to preventing them before they occur,” Balochistan Additional Chief Secretary Hamza Shafqaat wrote on X.

The development follows a steep rise in militancy-related deaths in Pakistan in 2025. According to statistics released by the Pakistan Institute for Conflict and Security Studies (PICSS) last month, combat-related deaths in 2025 rose 73 percent to 3,387.

These included 2,115 militants, 664 security forces personnel, 580 civilians and 28 members of pro-government peace committees, the think tank said.