ISLAMABAD: Former Prime Minister Imran Khan’s nomination papers for the upcoming general elections were filed on Saturday by his lawyers in the eastern city of Lahore, where he plans to contest for the National Assembly seat from the NA-122 constituency.
Khan has been embroiled in a slew of legal cases since his ouster from power in a no-confidence vote in April last year, which he alleges are designed to prevent him and his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party from participating in national polls.
Currently incarcerated in a high-security prison in Rawalpindi and facing trial on charges of leaking state secrets, the ex-premier’s eligibility to contest the elections remains uncertain.
Nevertheless, he also filed his nomination papers a day earlier for the February elections from his hometown of Mianwali, as the country nears the national polls.
“Former Prime Minister Imran Khan’s nomination papers have been submitted from Lahore,” confirmed the PTI party in a message, accompanied by an image of the receipt for his documents. “Imran Khan’s lawyers, Rai Muhammad Ali and Umar Talib, handled the submission of the nomination papers.”
Local media reports indicate that Khan signed the papers in Rawalpindi prison before they were transported to Lahore by his legal team.
These reports also quote Ali stating that Khan intends to contest the national polls from Mianwali, Lahore and Islamabad.
Amid political and legal challenges, the former prime minister’s PTI party is grappling with the loss of its election symbol, the cricket bat.
The PTI announced on Saturday its plan to legally challenge the Election Commission of Pakistan’s decision to remove the party’s symbol in court the coming week.
Ex-PM Khan files nomination papers from Lahore amid mounting legal and political challenges
https://arab.news/rsa6x
Ex-PM Khan files nomination papers from Lahore amid mounting legal and political challenges
- Khan is facing a number of cases and his eligibility to contest the general election in February remains uncertain
- The former prime minister already filed his nomination papers from his hometown of Mianwali for a national seat
Islamabad legal fraternity to rally today against Pakistani lawyer couple’s sentencing
- Imaan Zainab Mazari-Hazir, husband Hadi Ali Chattha were sentenced to 17 years in prison over social media posts critical of military
- Islamabad High Court Bar Association announces day-long strike, Human Rights Commission of Pakistan to organize protest in Karachi today
ISLAMABAD: Lawyers in Pakistan’s capital have gone on strike and will stage a protest today, Monday, against a court’s decision sentencing rights lawyer Imaan Zainab Mazari-Hazir and her husband Hadi Ali Chattha to a cumulative 17 years in prison over social media posts, a senior Islamabad Bar Association (IBA) member said.
Mazari-Hazir and Chattha were arrested on Friday while they were on their way to a court appearance, after which they were remanded to two weeks in judicial custody. Authorities had accused Mazari-Hazir and Chattha of violating the Prevention of Electronic Crimes Act (PECA) over posts on X that they said incited ethnic divisions and portrayed the military as being involved in “terrorism.” Both deny the allegations.
In a written verdict on Saturday, Additional District and Sessions Judge Muhammad Afzal Majoka said the prosecution had proved its case against both defendants under Sections 9, 10 and 26-A of the Prevention of Electronic Crimes Act (PECA), while acquitting them of a separate hate-speech charge.
A joint meeting of the IBA, Islamabad Bar Council and Islamabad High Court Bar Association was held on Saturday. The IBA announced a three-day strike from Jan. 26-28 against Mazari-Hazir and Chattha’s arrest following the meeting. It said the strike was also being held against the police’s alleged manhandling of senior IBA members while the couple was arrested, adding that lawyers were not allowed to attend their hearing.
“Since then, the sentence has been announced, which we believe was done without hearing the accused, a key legal requirement,” IBA Secretary Raja Khawar Nawaz Dhanyal told Arab News. “We therefore also protest the sentencing of Imaan and Hadi and demand that the sentence be suspended. We will also hold a rally today.”
An earlier press release from the IBA said the rally would take place at 11:00 am at the district court in Islamabad’s G-11 sector.
Dhanyal said the IBA also demands that full details of any cases lodged against Mazari-Hazir and Chattha should be disclosed.
Islamabad High Court Bar Association President Wahid Gilani also said its members were observing a strike against the sentencing.
“It’s a day-long strike, we will decided next line of action in the evening,” Gilani told Arab News.
Separately, the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) said it was organizing a protest against the Mazari-Hazir and Chattha’s arrest in Pakistan’s southern port city of Karachi on Monday evening.
The rights body said the protest will be held at the Karachi Press Club at 4:30 pm.
“HRCP Chairperson Asad Butt appeals to activists, lawyers and civil society members to join the protest to reclaim civil space and defend freedom of expression in Pakistan,” it said.
Pakistan’s Information Minister Attaullah Tarar had reacted to news of the couple’s sentencing on Saturday by writing on social media platform: “As you sow, so shall you reap.”










