Ex-PM Khan being moved to Rawalpindi jail after court order — party

Pakistan's former Prime Minister Imran Khan arrives to appear in the Supreme Court in Islamabad on July 24, 2023. (AFP/File)
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Updated 25 September 2023
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Ex-PM Khan being moved to Rawalpindi jail after court order — party

  • Khan held in Attock since being convicted in case involving sale of state gifts when he was PM
  • Khan is also in jail on remand until Sept. 26 for accusations of leaking state secrets

ISLAMABAD: Arrangements were being made on Monday to move former prime minister Imran Khan to Rawalpindi’s Adiala Jail from a high-security prison in Attock after an order from the Islamabad High Court (IHC), Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party said.

Khan was arrested on Aug. 5 after a trial court in Islamabad found him guilty of “corrupt practices” in a case involving the unlawful sale of state gifts during his tenure as prime minister from 2018 to 2022. He has since been serving his sentence at Attock Jail.

The IHC suspended his sentence on Aug. 29 but he remains in jail on remand in another case in which he is charged with leaking state secrets. The latest extension of the remand order will keep Khan in jail until Sept. 26. Meanwhile, the former PM had filed a petition with the IHC seeking his transfer to Adiala Jail.

“Arrangements are being made,” Khan spokesperson Zulfikar Bukhari told reporters when asked if Khan had been moved to the Rawalpindi prison or was in the process of being shifted. 

Separately, Khan’s lawyer Naeem Haider Panjutha spoke to reporters about his transfer plea hearing, saying the Islamabad High Court asked the prosecution team why Khan was being kept at Attock jail when a trial court had ordered authorities to send him to Adiala prison.

“We saw that the prosecution did not have any authentic arguments in response and they looked helpless,” Panjutha said.

Earlier in the day, Rawalpindi Central Jail Superintendent sent Khan’s production orders to his counterpart at the Attock jail, requesting that Khan be transferred to Rawalpindi prison for a hearing related to the case of the leaked secret documents. The Attock jail superintendent responded that shifting Khan would be a “security risk.”

But Khan’s lawyer said it was the state’s job “to provide security and protect citizens”:

“The court should have directed the administration to ensure he [Khan] should be presented with adequate security.”

In the state secrets case, Khan is charged with making public the contents of a confidential cable sent by Pakistan’s ambassador to the United States and using it for political gain, according to the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA).

Khan alleges that the cable proves the United States had pressed Pakistan’s military to orchestrate the fall of his government because he had visited Russia shortly before its invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

Washington and the Pakistani military have denied Khan’s accusations.

Khan also faces a range of other legal cases he says are politically motivated


Pakistan finance chief calls for change to population-based revenue-sharing formula

Updated 14 February 2026
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Pakistan finance chief calls for change to population-based revenue-sharing formula

  • Muhammad Aurangzeb criticizes current NFC formula, says it is holding back development
  • Minister says Pakistan to repay $1.3 billion debt in April as economic indicators improve

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb said on Saturday the country’s revenue-sharing formula between the federal and provincial governments “has to change,” arguing that allocating the bulk of funds on the basis of population was holding back long-term development.

The revenue-sharing is done under the National Finance Commission (NFC) Award that determines how federally collected taxes are divided between the center and the provinces. Under the current formula, much of the distribution weight is based on population, with smaller weightages assigned to factors such as poverty, revenue generation and inverse population density.

“Under the NFC award, 82 percent allocation is done on the basis of population,” Aurangzeb said while addressing the Federation of Pakistan Chambers of Commerce & Industry’s regional office in Lahore. “This has to change. This is one area which is going to hold us back from realizing the full potential of this country.”

Economists and policy analysts have long suggested broadening the NFC criteria to give greater weight to tax effort, human development indicators and environmental risk, though any change would require political consensus among provinces, making reform politically sensitive.

Aurangzeb also highlighted the economic achievements of the country in recent years, saying Pakistan’s import cover had improved from roughly two weeks just a few years ago to about 2.5 months currently, adding that the government had repaid a $500 million Eurobond last year.

“The next repayment is of $1.3 billion in April,” he continued, adding that “we will pay these obligations, which are the obligations of Pakistan, as we go forward.”

The minister also noted that unlike in 2022, when devastating floods forced Pakistan to seek international pledges at a Geneva conference, the government did not issue an international appeal during more recent flooding, arguing that fiscal buffers had strengthened.

“This time, the prime minister and the cabinet decided that we do not need to go for international appeal because we have the means,” he said.

He reiterated the government was pursuing export-led growth to avoid repeating past boom-and-bust cycles driven by import-led expansion that quickly depleted foreign exchange reserves and pushed Pakistan back into International Monetary Fund programs.