Pakistan’s ousted PM’s petition challenging three-year jail term fixed for hearing next week

Pakistan's former Prime Minister Imran Khan (C) leaves after appearing in the Supreme Court in Islamabad, Pakistan, on July 26, 2023. (Photo courtesy: AFP/File)
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Updated 16 August 2023
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Pakistan’s ousted PM’s petition challenging three-year jail term fixed for hearing next week

  • The PTI party says its leader has been deliberately denied his legal and constitutional rights since his arrest
  • Khan’s lawyers maintain they are not getting proper access to their client, though there was no legal obstacle

ISLAMABAD: Former prime minister Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party said on Wednesday the country’s higher judiciary had fixed a petition challenging his three-year imprisonment on graft charges for hearing next week.

Khan, who was ousted from power in a parliamentary no-trust vote last year in April, was convicted by a local court for illegally selling state gifts which he received during his term in the country’s top political office.

His party reiterated earlier in the day he was not getting all his legal and constitutional rights after being arrested from his Lahore residence in what has come to be known as the Toshakhana – or state repository – case more than 10 days ago.

“Chairman PTI Imran Khan’s application for suspension of lower court decision against Toshakhana judgment fixed for hearing on August 22, 2023,” the party circulated a brief message among the media community on Wednesday.

“While being in solidarity confinement, Chairman PTI has not yet been given proper access, legal team wasn’t allowed to meet even today & they’re filing another petition in Islamabad High Court,” it added.

The PTI noted there were no legal obstacles preventing Khan’s lawyers from meet him, adding they were perfectly within their right to interact with their client under the prison manual and the constitution.

However, in a social media post, it maintained the former PM had been deprived of his rights deliberately despite being the founding leader of the country’s largest political party.

Khan developed significant differences with the country’s military since his ouster from power which he attributed to a “foreign conspiracy.”

The former prime minister’s political faction faced a crackdown after resorting to violent protests and targeting government and military installations earlier this year in May when he was briefly arrested from a court in Islamabad on corruption allegations.


Pakistan says Azerbaijan’s SOCAR to finalize oil and gas investment next month

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Pakistan says Azerbaijan’s SOCAR to finalize oil and gas investment next month

  • SOCAR signals February decision after Davos talks, citing Pakistan’s reform momentum
  • Existing LNG, fuel supply ties point to deeper Azerbaijan-Pakistan energy cooperation

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s finance ministry said on Thursday Azerbaijan’s state energy company SOCAR is set to finalize an investment in Pakistan’s oil and gas sector next month, following high-level engagements on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos.

The announcement came after a business roundtable chaired by Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb, where SOCAR President Rovshan Najaf told Pakistani officials the company viewed Pakistan as a long-term energy partner, according to a statement from the finance ministry.

Pakistan has been seeking fresh foreign investment into its energy sector as part of broader economic reforms aimed at stabilizing supply, reducing costs and improving contractual transparency. The oil and gas sector, alongside mining and minerals, has been identified by Islamabad as central to energy security and industrial growth.

SOCAR already has a commercial footprint in Pakistan through SOCAR Trading, which supplies liquefied natural gas under a government-to-government framework with Pakistan LNG Limited. Under the arrangement, SOCAR can supply up to one LNG cargo per month without take-or-pay obligations, giving Pakistan greater flexibility in managing demand and pricing. The agreement has been extended into 2025, reflecting continued cooperation.

“SOCAR views Pakistan as a natural long-term energy partner,” Najaf said, according to the finance ministry statement, citing Pakistan’s “market depth, growing energy demand, and ongoing reform momentum in the oil and gas sector.”

He also highlighted SOCAR’s engagement with Pakistan State Oil on petroleum product supply and expressed interest in expanding cooperation across the broader oil and gas value chain as reforms advance.

Welcoming the planned investment, Aurangzeb reiterated the government’s commitment to attracting “strategic and commercially viable investment” in energy, saying reforms were focused on improving pricing transparency, contractual clarity and risk-sharing mechanisms, according to the statement.

SOCAR is a major state-owned energy company operating in more than 20 countries, with a workforce exceeding 66,000 employees and reported revenues of about $50.6 billion in 2024, the ministry said.

Pakistan and Azerbaijan have been deepening economic ties in recent years, with energy cooperation emerging as a key pillar alongside trade and investment discussions. Officials say the expected SOCAR investment would mark a significant step in strengthening bilateral energy links.