PTI denies hiring foreign law firm to highlight ex-PM Khan's detention in international courts

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/File)
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Updated 02 September 2023
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PTI denies hiring foreign law firm to highlight ex-PM Khan's detention in international courts

  • The party says it has not approached any judicial forum outside Pakistan and does not intend to do so
  • The PTI said on social media a day earlier it had hired renowned barrister Geoffrey Ronald Robertson

ISLAMABAD: Former prime minister Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party denied on Saturday it had hired a foreign law firm to represent its top leader in international courts to highlight his detention in a high-security prison for about a month.

Khan was arrested from his residence in the eastern city of Lahore on Aug. 5 after a trial court found him guilty in a case involving illegal sale of state gifts during his stint in power. While the Islamabad High Court (IHC) suspended his three-year sentence and granted him bail in the case, Khan continued to stay behind bars since he was accused of compromising the secret diplomatic communication system by mishandling a confidential cable dispatched from Washington last year.

The PTI announced from its official social media account on platform X that the former PM had hired the internationally renowned barrister Geoffrey Ronald Robertson to represent him in international courts in cases related to “unlawful detention and human rights abuses.”

However, it later deleted the post and denied the information.

“There is no truth in the misleading reports being circulated about a foreign law firm, nor is any such initiative supported by the jailed Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf Chairman Imran Khan,” the party said in a statement. “We have not approached any judicial forum outside Pakistan nor have any intention to do so.”

The PTI has faced a countrywide crackdown since Khan’s first brief arrest on May 9 for suspected graft sparked widespread protests that saw mobs ransacking state installations, including military assets.

The party statement maintained that thousands of its workers, including senior leaders and women supporters, had since been imprisoned and deprived of justice and their rights.

“In addition to being the target of a murderous attack and sabotaging the investigation of the attack, more than 180 false and fake cases were established against Imran Khan in just 16 months,” it continued.

“However, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf demands rights from the Pakistani system of justice and calls for effective measures for the supremacy of the constitution and the rule of law from the justice system of the country,” it added.

The former prime minister is currently facing a prison trial in a special court under the Official Secrets Act of the country.


Pakistan urges world to treat water insecurity as global risk, flags India treaty suspension

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Pakistan urges world to treat water insecurity as global risk, flags India treaty suspension

  • Pakistan says it is strengthening water management but national action alone is insufficient
  • India unilaterally suspended Indus Waters Treaty last year, leading to irregular river flows

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Tuesday urged the international community to recognize water insecurity as a “systemic global risk,” warning that disruptions in shared river basins threaten food security, livelihoods and regional stability, as it criticized India’s handling of transboundary water flows.

The call comes amid heightened tensions after India’s unilateral decision last year to hold the 1960 Indus Waters Treaty “in abeyance,” a move Islamabad says has undermined predictability in river flows and compounded climate-driven vulnerabilities downstream.

“Across regions, water insecurity has become a systemic risk, affecting food production, energy systems, public health, livelihoods and human security,” Pakistan’s Acting Permanent Representative to the United Nations, Ambassador Usman Jadoon, told a UN policy roundtable on global water stress.

“For Pakistan, this is a lived reality,” he said, describing the country as a climate-vulnerable, lower-riparian state facing floods, droughts, accelerated glacier melt, groundwater depletion and rapid population growth, all of which are placing strain on already stressed water systems.

Jadoon said Pakistan was strengthening water resilience through integrated planning, flood protection, irrigation rehabilitation, groundwater replenishment and ecosystem restoration, including initiatives such as Living Indus and Recharge Pakistan, but warned that domestic measures alone were insufficient.

He noted the Indus River Basin sustains one of the world’s largest contiguous irrigation systems, provides more than 80 percent of Pakistan’s agricultural water needs and supports the livelihoods of over 240 million people.

The Pakistani diplomat said the Indus Waters Treaty had for decades provided a framework for equitable water management, but India’s decision to suspend its operation, followed by unannounced flow disruptions and the withholding of hydrological data, had created an unprecedented challenge for Pakistan’s water security.

Pakistan has said the treaty remains legally binding and does not permit unilateral suspension or modification.

The issue has gained urgency as Pakistan continues to recover from last year’s monsoon floods, which killed more than 1,000 people and devastated farmland in Punjab, the country’s eastern breadbasket, in what officials described as severe riverine flooding.

Last month, Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar said Pakistan had observed abrupt variations in river flows from India, creating uncertainty for farmers in Punjab during critical periods of the agricultural cycle.

“As we move toward the 2026 UN Water Conference, Pakistan believes the process must acknowledge water insecurity as a systemic global risk, place cooperation and respect for international water law at the center of shared water governance, and ensure that commitments translate into real protection for vulnerable downstream communities,” Jadoon said.