Ex-PM Khan’s party to challenge Pakistan court verdict connecting him to May 9 riots 

Ex-PM Khan’s party to challenge Pakistan court verdict connecting him to May 9 riots 
Supporters of Pakistan's jailed former Prime Minister Imran Khan hold his poster as they celebrate after he was aquitted of leaking state secrets following a court verdict in Karachi on June 3, 2024. (AFP/File)
Short Url
Updated 11 July 2024
Follow

Ex-PM Khan’s party to challenge Pakistan court verdict connecting him to May 9 riots 

Ex-PM Khan’s party to challenge Pakistan court verdict connecting him to May 9 riots 
  • Khan’s arrest in land graft case on May 9 last year led to his alleged supporters damaging government, army properties
  • Anti-terrorism court ruled on July 9 there was “reasonable” evidence that Khan was behind the violence of May 9

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party said on Thursday it would challenge a lower court’s verdicts dismissing three bail pleas by its founder and former Prime Minister Imran Khan in cases involving riots last year and declaring there was “reasonable” evidence of his involvement.

Alleged supporters of the PTI party attacked and damaged government and military installations on May 9, 2023, after Khan’s brief arrest that day in a land graft case. The attacks took place a little over a year after Khan fell out with Pakistan’s powerful military, blaming the institution for colluding with his rivals to oust him from office in a parliamentary vote in April 2022. The military and the political parties Khan blames reject the allegations.

Hundreds of PTI workers and leaders were arrested following the May 9 riots in a state-led crackdown on charges of involvement in the riots, and some continue to remain behind bars as they await trial. The military has also initiated army court trials of at least 103 people accused of involvement in the violence. Many close Khan aides have since deserted him, due to what is widely believed to be pressure from the army, which denies interfering in politics. 

Khan and other key leaders of his party are widely believed to have masterminded the violence but the ex-PM has distanced himself from the riots and says they have been used as a ruse by political rivals and the military to crack down on the party, which is arguably the most popular in Pakistan. They deny the charge.

“Party will most definitely challenge the verdict,” the PTI said on Thursday in a text message to reporters about the verdict by an Anti-Terrorism Court (ATC) in Lahore dismissing Khan’s bail petitions in three May 9 cases. “The judgment contained no evidence of Imran Khan ordering the May 9 violence.”

The ATC had on Saturday reserved its verdict on Khan‘s bail petitions in three cases concerning attacks on Lahore’s Jinnah House, the residence of the top military commander in the city, as well as Askari Tower and Shadman police station. 

The party said ATC Judge Khalid Arshad dismissed the PTI founder’s bail pleas by “drawing interferences and assumptions.” While ATCs in other parts of the country, including Rawalpindi and Sargodha, had dismissed May 9-related cases against Khan, the Lahore ATC had declared him a “main accused,” the party said, adding that this was another “politically motivated case” being used to prolong Khan’s “illegal incarceration.” 

Khan has been imprisoned since August last year after he was convicted in at least four separate cases, with two of the judgments suspended and Khan acquitted in a third case.

ATC VERDICT

Pakistan’s anti-corruption agency arrested Khan from the premises of the Islamabad High Court on May 9 last year, unleashing nationwide protests by his followers. That case involves accusations Khan and his wife received, when he was still prime minister, land worth up to 7 billion rupees ($24.7 million) from a property developer who had been charged in Britain with money laundering. The government says British authorities had returned 190 million pounds ($240 million) to Pakistan in connection with money laundering, but Khan had returned the money to the developer instead of keeping it in the national exchequer.

Khan’s PTI party called on supporters to “shut down Pakistan” over his May 9 arrest, writing on Twitter: “It’s your time, people of Pakistan. Khan has always stood for you, now its time to stand for him.”

Hundreds of Khan supporters blocked roads in cities and major highways across the country, as police poured into the streets, public gatherings were banned and telecommunications networks suspended. Previous attempts to arrest Khan from his Lahore home had already resulted in heavy clashes between his supporters and law enforcement personnel.

In its order dated July 9, the ATC court said Khan had instructed the party’s top leadership to stage the protests and damage military installations in the event of his arrest. It also quoted a video message by Khan right before his arrest in which he said the country would descend into a state “worse” than Sri Lanka if he was arrested. 

“Two prosecution witnesses participated in the meeting of hatching of criminal conspiracy in Zaman Park [Khan’s Lahore home] on May 7 and May 8 last year by the petitioner [Khan] and other top leadership of PTI wherein the petitioner himself instructed them regarding his apprehension of arrest and the reaction thereon of launching or protest and damage of military installations,” the court order said. 

The order highlighted that another meeting was held by top leaders of the PTI at the Rose Hotel on May 1 last year “wherein it was decided to block Marred and Kachahri Chowks to resist the movement of higher army officials.”

“You all [PTI leaders] in the leadership of Dr. Yasmin Rashid would gather PTI workers and attack military installations, government properties, and armed institutions for his release,” the court order said, quoting Khan as giving his party its plan of action in the event of his arrest. 

“The petitioner like other accused is responsible for the commission of heinous offenses against the State being member of the mob conjointly having common object so this [bail] petition deserves dismissal …

“An extraordinary concession of pre-arrest bail is meant for an innocent person and not the petitioner (Khan) who hatched, and materialized the alleged criminal conspiracy [...] to wage war against the state to topple over the government,” the order read.

It concluded that “reasonable grounds” existed to connect the petitioner with the alleged offenses, citing it as the reason to dismiss Khan’s pre-arrest bail requests and withdraw his interim bail.


Pakistani religio-political party vows to continue anti-inflation sit-in till demands aren’t met

Pakistani religio-political party vows to continue anti-inflation sit-in till demands aren’t met
Updated 04 August 2024
Follow

Pakistani religio-political party vows to continue anti-inflation sit-in till demands aren’t met

Pakistani religio-political party vows to continue anti-inflation sit-in till demands aren’t met
  • Jamaat-e-Islami protesters in Rawalpindi, Karachi have called on government to abolish new taxes, review agreements with power producers
  • Pakistan’s government has formed committee to negotiation with protesters, held talks that have remain inconclusive as of yet

ISLAMABAD: A leading Pakistani religious political party has warned it would not call off its anti-inflation sit-in in Rawalpindi and Karachi cities until its demands are not met, with the protest entering its tenth day today, Sunday. 

Thousands of supporters of the Jamaat-e-Islami (JI) party started a protest demonstration in Pakistan’s garrison city of Rawalpindi on July 26, gathering at the historic Liaqat Bagh to demand that the government review stringent economic measures that have financially burdened the people.

Pakistan’s government has formed a committee to hold negotiations with protesters. The JI expanded its protest to Pakistan’s largest city Karachi on Saturday, vowing not to let up until its demands are not met. 

“The rulers thought this sit-in would last for a few days, that they [protesters] would tire after a few days,” JI chief Hafiz Naeem-ur-Rehman told supporters at Liaqat Bagh on Saturday night. 

“The rulers should listen to us, we will not return until our demands are not met,” he vowed. 

Rehman said that it is the responsibility of the state to provide education, health care and employment to the masses. He lamented that militancy was rising in Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan provinces while street crimes were rampant in Karachi. 

“But the rulers focus only on their protocol and luxuries,” Rehman said. 

Pakistan’s tax-heavy budget, which proved instrumental in helping Islamabad gain a new loan program with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has been criticized by opposition parties and traders across the country, who have called on the government to review its economic policies. 

Pakistan’s Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb has frequently said the country had no other option but to seek a bailout program from the IMF to stabilize its fragile economy. 

Pakistan has been grappling with a macroeconomic crisis that has caused its currency to weaken against the US dollar, foreign reserves to plummet to historic lows and inflation to surge to double-digit levels in the past two years. 


Pakistan’s disaster management authority warns of glacial lake outbursts, landslides in KP, GB

Pakistan’s disaster management authority warns of glacial lake outbursts, landslides in KP, GB
Updated 04 August 2024
Follow

Pakistan’s disaster management authority warns of glacial lake outbursts, landslides in KP, GB

Pakistan’s disaster management authority warns of glacial lake outbursts, landslides in KP, GB
  • GLOFs, landslides and flash floods expected in KP, GB from Aug. 3-6, says disaster management authority 
  • Low-level flash floods can impact temporary bridge and road connections in upstream areas, it says 

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s disaster management authority this week warned of glacial lake outbursts (GLOF), flash floods and landslides in Pakistan’s northern Gilgit-Baltistan (GB) and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa areas from Aug. 3-6, as Islamabad grapples with torrential rains this monsoon season. 

Torrential monsoon rains in Pakistan have killed at least 30 people this week, drenching the country’s second-largest city of Lahore in the most rainfall it has received in more than four decades, according to authorities.

Pakistan is recognized as one of the world’s worst-affected countries due to climate change impacts. The South Asian country has experienced torrential rains, droughts and heat waves that have become more severe and erratic over the past couple of years. 

“The National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) Emergencies Operation Center anticipated that a glacial lake outburst flood (GLOF), Landslides and Flash Flood is expected in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Gilgit Baltistan due to increasing glacier melt, persistent high temperatures and weather system bringing intermittent rains from today till Tuesday,” the state-run Associated Press of Pakistan (APP) said on Saturday. 

The NDMA said intermittent rains and high temperatures are expected to trigger low-level/localized flash floods, which in turn can impact temporary bridge and road connections for upstream areas.

The authority has advised the provincial disaster management authorities and local administrations in KP and GB to closely monitor the situation, identify at-risk populations, and evacuate them to safer zones in case of medium to high flows, the state-run media reported. 

Unusually heavy rains in June 2022 triggered flash floods in many parts of the country, killing over 1,700 people, inflicting losses of around $30 billion, and affecting at least 30 million people.

In June, a UN official warned that an estimated 200,000 people in Pakistan could be affected by the upcoming monsoon season, which is expected to bring heavier rains than usual.
The United Nations, with help from local authorities, has prepared a contingency plan, with $40 million set aside to respond to any emergencies, said Mohamed Yahya, the newly appointed Resident Coordinator and Humanitarian Coordinator in Pakistan.


Pakistan offers Iraq police training, urges halt to withholding pilgrims’ passports

Pakistan offers Iraq police training, urges halt to withholding pilgrims’ passports
Updated 04 August 2024
Follow

Pakistan offers Iraq police training, urges halt to withholding pilgrims’ passports

Pakistan offers Iraq police training, urges halt to withholding pilgrims’ passports
  • Both countries have tried to enhance law enforcement cooperation, focusing on counterterrorism, counternarcotics
  • A senior Iraqi official says he will discuss the issue of pilgrims’ travel documents with director general of passports

ISLAMABAD: Federal Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi on Saturday discussed the possibility of training Iraqi police in Pakistan during a meeting with a delegation from the Arab state, where he also raised the issue of not withholding the passports of Pakistani pilgrims.
Pakistan and Iraq have discussed law enforcement cooperation in recent years, focusing on enhancing collaboration in counterterrorism, counternarcotics and intelligence-sharing.
The two sides also focused on several bilateral issues as Naqvi welcomed Commander of Iraq’s Rapid Response Unit, Lt. Gen. Dr. Tahamir Ismail, at his office in Islamabad.
“The conversation included training Iraqi police in Pakistan and collaboration on the Safe City Project,” said a statement released by the ministry after the meeting. “They discussed enhancing mutual cooperation to prevent illegal immigration and human trafficking.”
The interior minister also requested the Iraqi authorities not to withhold Pakistani pilgrims’ passports visiting their country.
“They discussed matters of mutual interest, including providing more facilities to Pakistani pilgrims in Iraq and eliminating the requirement of keeping their passports,” the statement added.
Pakistani pilgrims frequently travel to Iraq, particularly to visit the holy cities of Karbala and Najaf, which are significant religious sites for Shia Muslims. The journeys of these pilgrims are often organized by tour operators who arrange their visas, travel and accommodation.
In recent years, the Iraqi government has implemented stricter controls, including the practice of temporarily keeping passports to prevent pilgrims from overstaying their visas, which has been a particular concern for pilgrims from economically struggling regions like Pakistan.
The Iraqi commander said that pilgrims coming from Pakistan were highly respected and added he would discuss the issue with the director general of passports in his country.


Pakistan’s top court judges question relief to Imran Khan’s party in reserved seats verdict

Pakistan’s top court judges question relief to Imran Khan’s party in reserved seats verdict
Updated 03 August 2024
Follow

Pakistan’s top court judges question relief to Imran Khan’s party in reserved seats verdict

Pakistan’s top court judges question relief to Imran Khan’s party in reserved seats verdict
  • Justices Amin Uddin Khan and Naeem Akhtar Afghan were part of the bench but diverged from majority verdict
  • They point out Khan’s PTI party was not claiming the reserved seats in a detailed, 29-page dissenting note

ISLAMABAD: Two Pakistani top court judges on Saturday questioned the majority verdict in a case involving parliamentary reserved seats, in which former prime minister Imran Khan’s political party was granted relief, saying the judgment had ignored “all rules of procedure.”
Justices Amin Uddin Khan and Naeem Akhtar Afghan, who were part of the Supreme Court bench that adjudicated the matter, diverged from the majority verdict in a short order before issuing a 29-page note detailing the legal reasons for their differing view.
The reserved seats case came up for hearing because Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party candidates had to contest the February 8 national polls as independents after being deprived of its symbol in a legal battle for not holding proper intraparty polls.
The PTI-backed candidates won the most seats, though the election commission ruled they were not entitled to reserved parliamentary seats for women and minorities, as these were meant only for political parties.
However, the apex court issued a different verdict on July 12, providing relief to Khan’s party.
“The majority judgment ignores all rules of procedure, substantive provisions of law and the Constitution,” the two judges wrote in their dissenting note.
The petitions for the seats were filed by the Sunni Ittehad Council (SIC), which the PTI-backed candidates had joined after winning the general seats since their party’s political identity was not recognized.
“Relief cannot be granted to the PTI as PTI was not before the Court nor tried to become a party before the ECP, High Court and before this Court nor was claiming the reserved seats, which were in issue in the instant litigation,” the dissenting note added.
The reserved seats for women and minorities in Pakistan’s national and provincial assemblies are to ensure greater political inclusion.
They are allocated to various political factions on a proportional basis after considering the number of general seats won by them during elections.
The Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) refused to allocate these seats to PTI and SIC on technical grounds, instead distributing them among other parties mostly belonging to Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s ruling coalition.
The government expressed its reservations over the Supreme Court’s majority verdict.
It has also been working on a parliamentary legislation to prevent its implementation in PTI’s favor.


Balochistan ethnic rights protests continue despite ‘deal’ with government

Balochistan ethnic rights protests continue despite ‘deal’ with government
Updated 03 August 2024
Follow

Balochistan ethnic rights protests continue despite ‘deal’ with government

Balochistan ethnic rights protests continue despite ‘deal’ with government
  • Government blames the protesters for not honoring the agreement, while they complain of an intensifying crackdown
  • Police in Karachi arrested over 35 Baloch protesters, as officials demanded an end to sit-ins across Balochistan

QUETTA: An ethnic Baloch rights group that has been protesting in many districts of Pakistan’s southwestern Balochistan province continued its sit-ins for the eighth consecutive day on Saturday, despite a written agreement reached between its leaders and government officials about two days ago.
The Baloch Yakjehti Committee (BYC) held a protest gathering last week in the Pakistani port city of Gwadar against alleged human rights abuses, extrajudicial killings and enforced disappearances in Balochistan, which rights activists and the families of victims blame on Pakistani security forces. The government and security agencies deny involvement.
Gwadar is the hub of the multibillion-dollar China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), which has experienced road blockades and a complete Internet shutdown during the protest, cutting it off from the rest of the country.
The provincial administration said it accepted the protesters’ demands, asking the authorities to release the detained BYC members, resume Internet and mobile services, remove highway blockades, quash police cases against their leadership and register cases against paramilitary soldiers who allegedly shot at the demonstrators.
“The government is unable to understand that despite signing a written agreement, the Baloch Yakjehti Committee has not called off protests in Balochistan and is not honoring the deal,” Assistant Commissioner Gwadar Jawad Ahmed Zehri told Arab News.

Activists and supporters of Baloch Yakjehti Committee stage protest against alleged human rights violations and heavy deployment of security forces in Balochistan in Panjgur district on August 3, 2024. (Photo Courtesy: BYC)

“The government has started acting on their demands and released 70-plus arrested protesters only in Gwadar,” he continued. “It has also directed the police to release all the detained protesters since July 24 and quash FIRs [first information reports] against the group’s leadership and members.”
BYC leaders and provincial officials confirm that over a dozen people who were en route to Gwadar to attend the demonstration were injured in clashes with paramilitary personnel in Balochistan’s Mastung district. BYC says one person was also killed in the violence, while officials say they are investigating the claim.
Security forces have also complained of being targeted by the demonstrators, saying it led to the death of a soldier.
Speaking to Arab News, Sadia Baloch, a BYC member, described the deal with the government as a “joke,” accusing the authorities of intensifying their crackdown against the protesters.
“If the government were serious about addressing the issue peacefully, it would not have targeted the demonstrators,” she said. “Dozens of our members have been arrested in Karachi and Nushki.”

Activists and supporters of Baloch Yakjehti Committee stage protest against alleged human rights violations and heavy deployment of security forces in Balochistan in Panjgur district on August 3, 2024. (Photo Courtesy: BYC)

Police in Pakistan’s southeastern province of Sindh arrested over 35 Baloch activists in Karachi from the Arts Council roundabout and the press club building.
It also cracked down on BYC activists in Nushki in Balochistan, who later blocked a key Pak-Iran trade route in protest.
Beberg Baloch, a senior group leader, said protests would continue across the province until the government gets serious about fulfilling the group’s demands.
“The government has been claiming that all BYC demands have been met after successful talks,” he said while speaking to Arab News. “So, why are the Internet and mobile phone services still suspended in Gwadar and the highways are not opened for the smooth flow of traffic?”

Activists and supporters of Baloch Yakjehti Committee stage protest against alleged human rights violations and heavy deployment of security forces in Balochistan in Panjgur district on August 3, 2024. (Photo Courtesy: BYC)