Ex-PM Imran Khan challenges conviction on graft charges in Islamabad High Court

Naeem Haider Panjutha, center, a lawyer of Pakistan's former Prime Minister Imran Khan's legal team, arrives at a court to file petition against Khan's conviction, in Islamabad, Pakistan, Tuesday, Aug. 8, 2023. (AFP/File)
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Updated 08 August 2023
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Ex-PM Imran Khan challenges conviction on graft charges in Islamabad High Court

  • Khan jailed for three years on charges of selling state gifts unlawfully as prime minister
  • Ex-PM appeals to high court to set aside trial court’s order that convicted and sentenced him

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s former prime minister Imran Khan challenged his conviction on graft charges in a high court on Tuesday, his lawyer said.

Naeem Panjutha said the petition to challenge the weekend conviction had been filed in the Islamabad High court.

Khan has been jailed for three years on charges of selling state gifts unlawfully during his tenure as premier from 2018 to 2022.

Under a set procedure, the court has to admit the petition and then fix it for hearing to start formal proceedings into the grounds cited by Khan’s lawyer to overturn the conviction.

Khan, 70, has been at the heart of political turmoil since he was ousted as prime minister in a vote of no confidence last year, raising concern about stability in the nuclear-armed country as it grapples with an economic crisis.

“Being aggrieved and dissatisfied,” Khan has appealed to the high court to “set aside” the trial court’s order that convicted and sentenced him, according to a copy of the petition posted by Panjutha on social media platform X, formerly Twitter.

The former premier has been detained at a distant prison which according to his lawyers lacks facilities entitled to political prisoners.

Police took Khan from his home in the city of Lahore on Saturday and transferred him to the jail in Attock district, near the capital Islamabad.


Pakistan to hold first nationwide anti-polio drive of 2026 tomorrow 

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Pakistan to hold first nationwide anti-polio drive of 2026 tomorrow 

  • Trained polio volunteers to vaccinate over 45 million children countywide from Feb. 2-8 
  • Pakistan reported 31 polio cases in 2025, a significant decline from 74 cases in 2024

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani health authorities will launch the first nationwide anti-polio campaign of the year tomorrow, Monday, to vaccinate over 45 million children against the disease, state media reported. 

Pakistan recorded a significant decline in polio cases last year compared to 2024, when the South Asian country reported an alarming 74 cases. In 2025, the number of polio cases in Pakistan dropped to 31. 

Authorities say the progress in anti-polio efforts reflects strengthened program implementation, enhanced surveillance and improved coordination between federal and provincial stakeholders. This year’s first anti-polio campaign will take place from Feb. 2-8. 

“A nationwide anti-polio campaign will begin from tomorrow,” state broadcaster Radio Pakistan reported on Sunday. 

“During the campaign, 45 million children under five years of age will be vaccinated with anti-polio drops.”

Pakistan and Afghanistan remain the only two countries worldwide where polio remains endemic. Both countries held several vaccination campaigns last year in a bid to eliminate the disease from the country. 

Prime Minister’s Focal Person for Polio Eradication Ayesha Raza Farooq said last week that around 400,000 trained polio workers will vaccinate children in the door-to-door campaign. 

Pakistani health officials have cited the deteriorating security situation in the country as a major obstacle in its bid to eliminate polio from the country. 

Polio workers and their security escorts have repeatedly been targeted in militant attacks, particularly in parts of the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) and Balochistan provinces, complicating efforts to reach every child.

A gun attack targeting a polio vaccination team in Pakistan’s northwestern Bajaur district in December 2025 left one police constable and a civilian dead.

Natural disasters, including flooding, have also disrupted vaccination campaigns in recent years.