The Fiji Times

Pakistan court jails Khan for 10 years

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ISLAMABAD - A court in Pakistan jailed Imran Khan for 10 years on Tuesday for leaking state secrets, the harshest sentence the popular former prime minister and cricket superstar has received and one announced just days before a general election.

The special court found Khan, 71, guilty of making public the contents of a secret cable from Pakistan’s ambassador in Washington to the Islamabad government, his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party said. Former foreign minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi was also sentenced to 10 years in the same case.

Khan was previously sentenced to three years in a corruption case in August, which had already ruled him out of the February 8 election.

The court is likely to issue a written verdict within a day or two. Khan’s PTI party said it would challenge the ruling.

“We don’t accept this illegal decision,” Khan’s lawyer, Naeem Panjutha, posted on social media platform X.

The PTI has not called for protests or demonstrat­ions before the election. A bomb in Pakistan’s Balochista­n region killed three PTI members on Tuesday, the party said, hours after Khan was sentenced. There were no details of who was responsibl­e.

Khan aide Zulfikar Bukhari told Reuters the legal team was given no chance to represent Khan or to cross examine witnesses. The proceeding­s were carried out in the maximum-security Adiala jail in Rawalpindi.

Another of Khan’s lawyers, Ali Zafar, told ARY television that given the circumstan­ces of the trial and sentencing, the chances of the case being quashed on appeal were “100%”.

Bukhari called the conviction an attempt to weaken support for Khan. “People will now make sure they come out and vote in larger numbers,” he told Reuters.

Khan’s legal team was hoping to get him released from jail, where he has been since August last year, but the latest conviction means that is unlikely even as the charges are contested in a higher court.

The party of three-time Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, Khan’s

main political opponent, said the verdict was not harsh enough.

“I think, based on his carelessne­ss and crime - pertaining to important national interests - this is a very light sentence,” Ahsan Iqbal, a senior Sharif aide, said in a TV interview.

MULTIPLE CASES

Analysts believe Sharif’s party is the frontrunne­r to form the next government. Sharif and his daughter, Maryam Nawaz, were convicted and jailed over graft allegation­s days before the last general election in 2018. Analysts say that, that helped Khan win, while Khan’s sentence now helps Sharif. Both blame the military.

Khan’s sentencing just before the polls will “raise questions about the election’s credibilit­y”, said Mazhar Abbas, a Karachi-based analyst.

Pakistan’s recovery from an economic crisis depends on political stability. The election comes as Pakistan is navigating a tricky recovery path under a $3 billion Internatio­nal Monetary Fund bailout that helped it narrowly avert a sovereign default last year.

Khan has been fighting dozens of cases since he was ousted from power in a parliament­ary vote of no-confidence in 2022.

 ?? Picture: REUTERS/ Akhtar Soomro/File Photo ?? Former Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan pauses as he speaks with Reuters during an interview, in Lahore, Pakistan.
Picture: REUTERS/ Akhtar Soomro/File Photo Former Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan pauses as he speaks with Reuters during an interview, in Lahore, Pakistan.

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