A court has granted bail to Pakistan’s former prime minister Imran Khan for two weeks in a corruption case and ordered his protection from arrest on any charges until Monday, amid concerns that he would be immediately rearrested on his release.
Security was tight as Mr Khan appeared at a hearing at Islamabad high court on Friday seeking bail in multiple cases. He had been in police custody since Tuesday after being arrested on the premises of the court by almost 100 paramilitary officers.
To the anger of the government, Mr Khan was granted relief on Thursday when the supreme court ruled that the manner of his arrest, on court premises, was illegal, and ordered him to seek bail from the high court. He stayed overnight at a police guest house but was no longer a detainee.
On Friday judges formally granted Mr Khan bail for two weeks in the Al Qadir case, which involves allegations of illegal land transfers. The judge also granted Mr Khan bail in three other cases and barred authorities from arresting Mr Khan in any case across the country until Monday.
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Mr Khan was kept in the courtroom until late on Friday evening owing to security concerns after shots were fired outside. He planned to return to home in Lahore.
Mr Khan and his lawyer had expressed concern that he faced rearrest in relation to some of the dozens of other cases he is facing. “I am 100 per cent concerned that I will be arrested again,” Mr Khan told local media on his way into the courtroom. He said that if he was arrested again, the cycle of violence would continue.
Mr Khan’s lawyer, Babar Awan, said that Lahore and Punjab police were travelling to Islamabad high court to arrest Mr Khan. “Why are they then so adamant to arrest Imran? Let me tell you, any attempt to arrest Imran again will be unconstitutional,” he told reporters.
The government, led by prime minister Shehbaz Sharif, accused the supreme court of “hypocrisy” over its verdict and said leaders of Mr Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party were “pushing the country towards destruction”.
The interior minister, Rana Sanaullah, made it clear that Mr Khan was not safe from arrest despite the directions by the court. “We will try to get his bail nullified,” he said. “And if he is given bail in some cases and some cases are still left, we will definitely arrest him.”
Maulana Fazlur Rehman, president of the Pakistan Democratic Movement (PDM) – the political coalition that governs Pakistan under Sharif – accused the supreme court of “protecting terrorism” in granting relief to Mr Khan.
The crackdown on members of the PTI party continued in the early hours of Friday as two more senior leaders, Yasmin Rashid and Shireen Mazari, were arrested in Lahore and Islamabad, bringing the total of detained PTI leaders to seven.
Mr Khan has denied all charges against him as politically motivated. His popularity has risen since he was removed from power in April last year, and accused the country’s powerful military, once his close ally, of orchestrating his downfall, and senior military leaders of attempts to assassinate him.
As the number of cases mounted against him, Mr Khan’s arrest had seemed likely for months. He eluded one attempt by police to detain him in March.
Speaking in court on Friday Mr Khan said his battle was not with the whole military establishment, but with “one man, the army chief”, referring to the newly appointed Asim Munir Ahmed, a general with whom Mr Khan had a notoriously fractious relationship while he was prime minister.
[ Pakistan supreme court rules arrest of Imran Khan to be illegalOpens in new window ]
The violent protests that erupted across the country this week largely abated after the supreme court ruling, but the army was still present on the streets and an emergency law preventing gatherings was imposed by police in the capital. More than 2,000 people have been arrested, and mobile internet remains shut down across the country.
Nusrat Javed, a senior analyst, said that while it appeared Mr Khan was “invincible” after being granted protection from arrest by the courts, he warned that the ex-prime minister faced an uphill battle in going against Pakistan’s powerful military, in particular the army chief. “In the historic context of Pakistan, I find it difficult to imagine Imran Khan prevailing against the army chief,” said Mr Javed.
Hammad Azhar, a senior PTI figure, said: “Imran Khan has given a message that an attempt is being made to arrest him again and he wants the entire country to come out in peaceful protest.” – Guardian
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