The decision is a reprieve for Khan, who was due to be arrested a few hours earlier
Supporters of former Pakistan prime minister Imran Khan gather outside his residence in Lahore Thursday. Pic/AFP
A Pakistani court on Thursday extended a pause in the effort to arrest former premier Imran Khan, a sign of easing tension in the country’s cultural capital after clashes erupted this week when police tried to detain him. The decision is a reprieve for Khan, who was due to be arrested a few hours earlier. The Lahore High Court ordered police to suspend the plan to arrest the 70-year-old opposition leader until Friday. It also asked Khan’s legal team for talks to resolve the issue.
ADVERTISEMENT
Thursday’s order sent a wave of relief through Khan’s stick-wielding supporters, who were prepared to prevent police from reaching his house in Lahore. Despite the order, however, police and paramilitary rangers deployed for Khan’s arrest were not withdrawn. Usman Anwar, the police chief in the Punjab province, said the violence in Lahore began Tuesday when officers went to comply with the court order and arrest Khan. But, he said, Khan’s supporters started throwing stones at officers, who were unarmed and only carrying batons. “We will comply with the court order, and we will do it,” he told a local Geo TV station.
Also Read: More clashes in Pakistan as police try to arrest Imran Khan
In Islamabad, Khan’s legal team on Thursday asked judge Zafar Iqbal to suspend the arrest warrants he had issued last week for Khan, who is accused of illegally selling state gifts and concealing his assets. Iqbal gave no indication of whether he will suspend the arrest warrants for Khan. Instead, he asked why Khan resisted when officers went to his house to arrest him. The judge said if Khan surrenders to court now, he will stop police from arresting him.
The Punjab police later on Thursday registered an FIR against Khan under a plethora of charges, including terrorism, a day after pitched battles broke out between security personnel and the ousted prime minister’s defiant supporters. The FIR said Khan incited over 2,500 of his party workers present at Zaman Park to attack police personnel who wanted to arrest him in a corruption case.
This story has been sourced from a third party syndicated feed, agencies. Mid-day accepts no responsibility or liability for its dependability, trustworthiness, reliability and data of the text. Mid-day management/mid-day.com reserves the sole right to alter, delete or remove (without notice) the content in its absolute discretion for any reason whatsoever