In rare interview, sons of Pakistan’s Imran Khan urge President Trump to push for father’s release

The still image taken from a video on May 13, 2025, shows former Pakistani PM Imran Khan's sons Kasim (L) and Sulaiman speaking during an interview. (Photo courtesy: Mario Nawafal/ YouTube)
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Updated 14 May 2025
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In rare interview, sons of Pakistan’s Imran Khan urge President Trump to push for father’s release

  • Ex-PM Khan has been in jail for nearly two years on a slew of charges he says are politically motivated
  • Pakistani authorities deny Khan’s claims of persecution, accuse his party of leading violent protests

ISLAMABAD: The sons of former prime minister Imran Khan have urged US President Donald Trump and the international community to help free their father from prison, appealing to “people of influence” around the world to press for his release.

In a rare interview released on social media, Kasim Khan and Sulaiman Khan spoke about the alleged “suppression of democracy” in Pakistan and a lack of basic facilities for Khan in his prison cell and said their father was being kept in prison on “trumped up charges.” 

Khan has been in prison since August 2023 and faces a slew of cases he and his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party say are politically motivated. The PTI has held frequent protests demanding his release and against the Pakistani government over what it says were rigged general elections in Feb. 2024 and a campaign to subdue PTI and its support base since Khan’s ouster from the PM’s office in April 2022 in a no-trust parliamentary vote. 

Pakistani authorities deny the allegations, accusing the ex-premier and his party of leading violent anti-government protests in the past, particularly in May 2023 and Nov. 2024. Hundreds of PTI supporters were jailed after riots allegedly ordered by the party against the army on May 9, 2023, while the government says four troops were killed in protests in November last year to demand Khan’s release. The PTI denies instigating followers to violence.

“In terms of a message to the Trump administration, we’d call for any government that supports free speech and proper democracy to join the call for our father’s release, and especially the most powerful leader in the world,” Suleiman said in the interview with entrepreneur, business influencer and citizen journalist Mario Nawfal.

Sulaiman said there was a tradition of “dynastic politics” in Pakistan, dominated by two main parties, the ruling Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz and coalition partner the Pakistan Peoples Party, and his father wanted to break away from that tradition.

The former cricket-star-turned politician, who was believed to have been brought into power by Pakistan’s powerful military after 2018 elections, eventually fell out with top generals, accusing them of colluding with his political rivals to engineer his ouster from the PM’s office in the parliamentary no-trust vote. The military and Khan’s political rivals deny this.

Khan’s elder son, Kasim, said his children simply wanted the international community to be aware of what was going on in Pakistan and “hopefully take action.”

“We’d love to speak to Trump or try and figure out a way where he would be able to help out in some way because at the end of the day, all we are trying to do is free our father, bring democracy in Pakistan and just ensure his basic human rights,” Kasim said.

Sulaiman also appealed to “people of influence” around the world to speak for their father’s release.

“I think that would be huge, just to create a bit more noise because it’s definitely gone a bit quiet recently,” he said.

“We would love people to reach out to us if they have some influence or potential to help with this situation.”

Asked about reports that Khan may negotiate a deal with the government to get out of prison, Kasim said:

“I just don’t see him taking a deal like that to save his skin. He’s a very principled person ... I don’t think he’ll just take a deal while other people are sitting in cells on his behalf, his supporters.”

Sulaiman added that Khan had not “given up” despite almost two years in prison.

“He’s not just sitting in his cell, kind of twiddling his thumbs. He’s very much planning for the future, believes that change is coming.”

A parole hearing for Khan’s release is due to be heard in Islamabad today, Wednesday.


Pakistan PM meets IAEA chief in Vienna, witnesses nuclear medicine cooperation deal signing

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Pakistan PM meets IAEA chief in Vienna, witnesses nuclear medicine cooperation deal signing

  • INMOL Lahore designated as IAEA Collaborating Center to expand cancer treatment cooperation
  • Sharif calls sustainable and inclusive development the only path to peace amid global ‘polycrisis’

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif met International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi in Vienna on Tuesday and witnessed the signing of a cooperation agreement designating Pakistan’s Institute of Nuclear Medicine and Oncology (INMOL), Lahore, as an IAEA Collaborating Center.

The meeting took place at the Vienna International Center, home to several UN agencies. Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar and Grossi signed the Collaborating Center Agreement on behalf of Pakistan and the IAEA, respectively. The IAEA chief presented a plaque formally designating INMOL as a Collaborating Center, in a ceremony witnessed by Sharif.

“The Prime Minister reaffirmed Pakistan’s support for IAEA’s role in the promotion of responsible use of nuclear technology in areas such as cancer diagnosis and treatment, agriculture, nuclear power generation and industrial applications,” said a statement circulated by Sharif’s office in Islamabad.

“He praised the strong partnership between Pakistan and the IAEA, while observing that Pakistan was not only a beneficiary of the IAEA’s Technical Cooperation Programme but was also contributing to the work of the IAEA through the provision of its experts and conducting international trainings for IAEA Member States,” it added.

The statement said Grossi acknowledged Pakistan’s experience and expertise in the peaceful uses of nuclear technology and commended the quality of its engineers, scientists and technicians.

He maintained Pakistan was well placed to assist other IAEA member states in expanding peaceful nuclear applications and expressed interest in Pakistan’s participation at the Nuclear Energy Summit scheduled in France in March 2026.

The IAEA chief visited Pakistan last year to review cooperation on the peaceful uses of nuclear technology, including cancer diagnosis and treatment, as well as applications in energy and agriculture.

His engagements included visits to Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission cancer hospitals, inauguration of advanced treatment facilities and discussions with Sharif on expanding collaboration under the IAEA’s “Rays of Hope” initiative aimed at improving radiotherapy access in developing countries.

’POLYCRISIS’
Sharif also addressed a special event at the United Nations Office in Vienna, calling for sustainable and inclusive development to be treated as the world’s foremost conflict-prevention strategy, warning that overlapping geopolitical tensions, climate stress and technological disruption are converging into a global “polycrisis.”

“Our world stands at crossroads,” Sharif said. “We face intertwined crises. The defining danger of our time is not any single threat, rather it’s the combination of many.”

“Geopolitical hostility, climate stress, and technological disruption are all converging into a single destabilizing force,” he added. “The planet is facing a moment of polycrisis.”

Sharif argued that sustainable and inclusive development was the most effective long-term strategy to prevent conflict, stressing that developing nations bore the heaviest burden of climate change despite contributing the least to global emissions.

“Pakistan’s own experience is illustrative,” he said. “We stand at the front lines of the climate crisis, not through any fault of ours, but as one of its most disproportionate victims.”

He said Pakistan, which contributes less than one percent of global emissions, continues to face severe climate impacts, including devastating floods in recent years that destroyed homes, farmland and infrastructure.

Sharif also called for strengthening multilateral institutions, including the United Nations system, to better address emerging global challenges and ensure that innovation and new technologies benefit all countries rather than deepen existing divides.