Pakistan investigators say ex-PM Khan, over 900 others ‘guilty’ in dozen cases

Pakistan's former Prime Minister Imran Khan, who is facing terrorism charges, appears in court to extend pre-arrest bail, in Islamabad, Pakistan on August 25, 2022. (REUTERS/File)
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Updated 29 September 2023
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Pakistan investigators say ex-PM Khan, over 900 others ‘guilty’ in dozen cases

  • Charge sheet submitted before anti-terror court against Khan aides and supporters in cases related to May 9 riots
  • Khan’s brief arrest on May 9 in a graft case saw hundreds of his supporters ransack military and other properties

ISLAMABAD: Joint investigation teams set up to probe street violence following the brief arrest of former Prime Minister Imran Khan in May have declared over 900 people, including the ex-premier and other senior members of his party, prime suspects in a dozen cases and on Thursday submitted charge sheets against a number of the accused in an anti-terror court, police said.

Khan was arrested briefly on May 9 in a graft case that saw hundreds of his supporters pour into the streets across the country, ransacking military and other properties. Thousands were arrested in the aftermath as the military and the government said both the perpetrators and instigators of the violence would be brought to justice. Khan is now in jail serving a three-year sentence in a separate corruption case.

DIG Operations Imran Kishwar told media Khan and over 900 other leaders of his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party as well as activists nominated in May 9 cases had been “declared guilty of serious offenses.”

“We have declared them prime accused in 12 out of the total 14 cases registered under the anti-terrorism act and other charges at Lahore’s various police stations… [and] challans [charge sheets] have been submitted in the ATC,” he said.

Among those against whom there was “sufficient evidence” were Khan, former Punjab governor Omar Sarfaraz Cheema, former provincial ministers Mian Mehmoodur Rashid and former health minister Dr. Yasmin Rashid. Fashion designer and Khan supporter Khadija Shah, PTI activist Sanam Javed, and other followers of the ex-PM were also nominated in the cases, Kishwar said. 

Evidence against them was based on reports received from the national electronic media regulator, the Federal Inves­ti­gation Agency, and military authorities, the official added. 

Digital and photogrammetric evidence as well as voice messages of the suspects “confirmed the allegations” leveled against them in over a dozen cases lodged at different police stations in Lahore, Kishwar said.

On Thursday, the prosecution submitted challans in an anti-terrorism court (ATC) against leaders and hundreds of supporters of Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party for being “guilty” of multiple charges in cases involving the May 9 riots, including an attack on the corps commander’s residence in Lahore.

Special Prosecutor Syed Farhad Ali Shah told Dawn challans had been filed of suspects interrogated by the police, presented before a trial court, and subsequently sent on judicial remand in the cases. The investigation against Khan, he said, was “still incomplete” as he had not been taken into physical remand in any of the May 9 cases, nor had the court summoned him yet due to his arrest in other cases.

In the challans filed before the court, the prosecution alleged the violent protests were part of a planned conspiracy against the state: “400 pieces of video evidence, including speeches of the PTI chairman, proved that the attacks on military installations and premises in cantonment areas were pre-planned.”

Charges of mutiny and waging war against the state have been included in all cases and reports from the FIA and intelligence agencies have also been attached to the challans. As many as 368 suspects, including party leaders, have been challaned in the attack on the corp commanders residence alone.

The then government of PM Shehbaz Sharif had called in the army to help end deadly unrest in the wake of the arrest of Khan in a land fraud case, after his supporters stormed military buildings and other private and public properties.

The 70-year-old former cricket star has been at the center of a political crisis since he was ousted in a parliamentary vote of confidence in April 2022. The worst economic conditions in Pakistan in decades have compounded the crisis.

Khan was imprisoned on Aug. 5 after being sentenced to three years jail for being guilty of ‘corrupt practices’ in the sale of state gifts during his tenure as prime minister from 2018 to 2022.

The conviction has also barred him from contesting elections for five years.


Pakistan vaccinates over 44 million children as nationwide anti-polio drive enters last day

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Pakistan vaccinates over 44 million children as nationwide anti-polio drive enters last day

  • Pakistan kicked off seven-day nationwide anti-polio campaign on Feb. 2 to vaccinate over 45 million children
  • Pakistan reported 31 polio cases in 2025, a significant drop from the alarming 74 cases it reported in 2024

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani health volunteers have vaccinated over 44.1 million children against poliovirus in six days so far, the National Emergency Operations Center (NEOC) said on Sunday as the nationwide campaign entered its last day. 

Pakistan kicked off the seven-day anti-polio campaign on Feb. 2 to vaccinate over 45 million children under the age of five against poliovirus. 

In Punjab, health workers have vaccinated over 22.9 million children, in Sindh 10.4 million, in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) 7.1 million, in Balochistan 2.324 million, in Islamabad over 455,000, in Gilgit-Baltistan over 261,000 and in Azad Kashmir over 673,000 in the last six days, the NEOC said. 

“In six days, vaccination of more than 44.1 million children has been completed across the country,” the NEOC said in a statement. 

It said over 400,000 trained polio workers are going door-to-door to administer polio drops to children.

“Open your doors for polio workers and ensure your children receive polio drops,” the NEOC said. “Parents and communities are urged to fully cooperate with polio workers.”

Pakistan and Afghanistan remain the only two countries worldwide where polio remains endemic. The NEOC said the anti-polio drive was being conducted simultaneously in both countries. 

Last year, Pakistan reported 31 polio cases, a significant drop from the alarming 74 cases reported in the country in 2024. The South Asian nation reported six cases in 2023 and only one in 2021, but saw a sharp resurgence in 2024.

Pakistan’s polio program began in 1994, but efforts to eradicate the virus have been repeatedly undermined by vaccine misinformation and resistance from some religious hard-liners who claim that immunization is a foreign plot to sterilize Muslim children or a cover for Western espionage.

Militant groups have also frequently targeted polio vaccination teams and the security personnel assigned to protect them, often resulting in deadly attacks, particularly in KP and Balochistan.