Ex-PM Khan’s Karachi party headquarters allowed to open after months-long closure

Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party activists and supporters protest against the arrest of Pakistan's former Prime Minister Imran Khan, in Karachi on August 27, 2023. (AFP/File)
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Updated 28 September 2023
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Ex-PM Khan’s Karachi party headquarters allowed to open after months-long closure

  • Insaf House was closed after violent protests by PTI supporters in May
  • Election Commission has announced a general election for January

KARACHI: The Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party of former Prime Minister Imran Khan said on Thursday the party’s headquarters in the country’s largest city, Karachi, had been ordered open by a court months after it was sealed in the aftermath of violent protests by Khan’s supporters in May.

Known as Insaf House, the Karachi political office of the PTI was sealed after Khan’s brief arrest on May 9 in a graft case saw hundreds of his supporters pour out on the streets across the country, ransacking military and other properties. In Karachi, party leaders used social media to call on members and supporters to gather at Insaf House, leading to hundreds of protesters converging at the headquarters on Shahrah-e-Faisal, the city’s main thoroughfare. Police used tear gas to disperse the crowd, after which the headquarter was closed.

“Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf’s political office, Insaf House, has been reopened upon the orders of the court,” Falak Almas, PTI’s secretary for information in Karachi, said in a statement.

“All the activities related to the upcoming local and general elections will be initiated from the Insaf House and it will serve as a meeting place for local party representatives.” 

The Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) last Thursday announced a general election for January, almost three months later than scheduled, removing political uncertainty over the timing to help salvage a falling economy.

Elections in the politically and economically troubled South Asian nation were due to be held in November but were delayed due to fresh demarcation of constituencies under a new census.

An ECP statement said the vote will take place late in January after the conclusion of a process that includes filing nomination papers, appeals and campaigning.

Pakistan is currently being run by a caretaker government under interim Prime Minister Anwaar ul Haq Kakar that is meant to oversee a general election. Originally, elections were to be held within 90 days of the dissolution of the lower house of parliament in August.

The election commission has already questioned the impartiality of the caretaker government led by Kakar, who comes from a pro-military party, saying it appears to be aligned with the opponents of jailed former Prime Minister Imran Khan.

As it stands, former premier Khan, the main opposition leader, cannot fight this election after he was barred from public office for five years after a corruption investigation.


Four people, including two policemen, killed in twin blasts in northwest Pakistan

Updated 07 March 2026
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Four people, including two policemen, killed in twin blasts in northwest Pakistan

  • Attack on police van in South Waziristan and motorbike-mounted IED in Lakki Marwat hits KP province
  • Violence comes amid a surge in militancy and cross-border clashes between Pakistan and Afghanistan

ISLAMABAD: At least four people, including two policemen, were killed and about 20 others wounded in two separate blasts in Pakistan’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province on Saturday, officials said, the latest violence in a region grappling with militant violence.

One explosion targeted a police patrol van in Wana, the main town of South Waziristan district near the Afghan border, while another blast caused by explosives mounted on a motorbike struck a market area in Lakki Marwat district, according to police officials and preliminary reports.

The incidents come amid rising militant violence in Pakistan’s northwest, where authorities say armed groups operate from across the border in Afghanistan, straining relations between Islamabad and the Taliban administration in Kabul, with both sides engaged in a military conflict since last month.

“The control room received information in the evening about a bomb blast targeting a police van in Wana Bazaar,” a police official in the area, who did not want to be named, confirmed while speaking to Arab News over the phone.

He confirmed two deaths in the incident while saying more than 25 people had been injured.

The official said rescue teams responded promptly and shifted three seriously injured people to a nearby hospital in Wana.

In another incident during the day in Lakki Marwat, an improvised explosive device attached to a motorbike exploded near shops.

“Two people have been killed and about 10 have been injured in an IED blast in Lakki Marwat,” Raza Khan, Deputy Superintendent of Police in Bannu, told Arab News.

“The deceased are identified as Shoaib Ur Rehman and Furqan Ullah,” he added. “Shoaib, the owner of the shop, was the brother of the Lakki peace committee head.”

Peace committees in the region are informal, community-based groups that work with security forces to report militant activity and maintain order, making their members frequent targets of attacks.

Pakistan’s Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi condemned the attacks and expressed grief over the incidents.

“I strongly condemn the blast near a police patrolling vehicle in Wana Bazaar,” Naqvi said in a statement, confirming the killing of four people, including two police personnel.

“Khyber Pakhtunkhwa police are on the front line in the war against terrorism,” he said, noting the force had made “unforgettable sacrifices” in the fight against militant groups.

Militant violence has surged in Pakistan’s border regions in recent months, particularly in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan provinces.
Islamabad has repeatedly accused the Afghan Taliban government of allowing militant groups, including the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), to operate from Afghan territory — a charge Kabul denies — as cross-border tensions between the two neighbors have escalated.