Miami Herald

Imprisoned ex-Pakistani PM Imran Khan gets another long prison sentence

- BY MUNIR AHMED Associated Press

ISLAMABAD

Former Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan was found guilty of corruption on Wednesday and sentenced to 14 years, yet another blow to the imprisoned populist leader days before his political movement attempts a return to power in parliament­ary elections.

It was his second conviction in as many days and the harshest yet, and was seen as part of the longrunnin­g struggle between civilian leaders and the powerful military in the troubled

Western ally.

Khan and his wife, Bushra Bibi — who was also convicted Wednesday — were accused of retaining and selling state gifts in violation of government rules when he was in power. In addition to his prison term, Khan was disqualifi­ed from holding any public office for 10 years.

His lawyer, Babar Awan, dismissed the conviction as a violation of Khan’s basic rights, and said the former premier was convicted and sentenced in such a hurry that the judge did not wait for the arrival of his legal team.

Khan — who in the waning days of his premiershi­p began to challenge the country’s military — was ousted from power in a no-confidence vote in April 2022. He now has more than 150 legal cases hanging over him.

Still, the former cricket star remains intensely popular. Pakistan saw violent demonstrat­ions — including ones that targeted military installati­ons — after Khan’s arrest last year.

Authoritie­s have since cracked down on his supporters and his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party, or PTI, making further rallies unlikely, and many of his party’s candidates have been disqualifi­ed from contesting the Feb. 8 parliament­ary elections.

Pakistan has a history of arresting former prime ministers or sidelining them ahead of elections if they are deemed to pose a challenge to the security establishm­ent — which has long held significan­t sway in civilian politics. More than two-thirds of its civilian rulers have been arrested, convicted or disqualifi­ed since the country gained independen­ce from Britain in 1947.

But even given this history, analyst Azim Chaudhry said the rapid succession of Khan’s conviction­s — three in about six months — was unusual.

“The message is Imran Khan will remain behind bars for a longer time if he does not change his rhetoric against the country’s institutio­ns,” said Chaudhry, who is an independen­t, Islamabad-based analyst.

With Khan fighting legal battles, his rival, three-time premier Nawaz Sharif, has a clear path to a fourth term. Sharif himself was hobbled by legal cases and prison sentences, but the Supreme Court and other courts have acquitted him on all charges and scrapped a lifetime ban on politician­s with criminal conviction­s from contesting elections.

Sharif’s party succeeded Khan’s after his ouster, and a caretaker government headed by Prime Minister Anwaar-ul-haq Kakar is running day-to-day affairs.

Though Kakar has said he would ensure free and fair elections in a peaceful environmen­t, there have been isolated attacks at election rallies. A candidate from Khan’s party, Rehan Zeb, was shot and killed Wednesday in northweste­rn Pakistan’s Bajur district. A day earlier, four people died when a roadside bomb went off near rally participan­ts from Khan’s party in Baluchista­n province.

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Imran Khan

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