Pakistan confronted additional political uncertainty as jailed former Prime Minister Imran Khan challenged the three-year sentence on graft expenses Tuesday.
Khan’s lawyer Naeem Panjutha mentioned the petition difficult the weekend conviction had been filed in Islamabad High Court which is able to hear the case Wednesday.
Ex-cricketer Khan, 70, was jailed on expenses of promoting state items unlawfully throughout his tenure as premier from 2018 to 2022.
Khan has been on the coronary heart of political turmoil since he was ousted as prime minister in a vote of no confidence final yr, elevating concern about stability within the nuclear-armed nation because it grapples with an financial disaster.
The 241-million-population South Asian nation in June secured a last-gasp $3 billion take care of the IMF, which has sought a consensus on coverage targets amongst all political events forward of common elections due by November.
“Being aggrieved and dissatisfied,” Khan has appealed to the excessive courtroom to “set aside” the trial courtroom’s order that convicted and sentenced him, in keeping with a replica of the petition posted by Panjutha on the social media platform X, previously Twitter.
Khan’s authorized crew say he’s being saved in abject circumstances in a small C-class cell in a jail in Attock, close to the capital Islamabad, with an open rest room, when he ought to qualify for a B-class cell with amenities together with an connected washroom, newspapers, books and TV.
Interior Minister Rana Sanaullah, who spent a number of months in jail on drug trafficking expenses he says was fabricated throughout Khan’s tenure, mentioned that Khan himself had been a proponent of uniformity in prisons.
“As far as the open washrooms, the jails have got only open washrooms, there are no separate washrooms, and it could be in Khan’s knowledge that the cells where we were kept they were also the same,” the minister informed Geo News TV.
He mentioned Khan might file an software in courtroom that he should not be saved with bizarre inmates.
“Whatever the court decides, it will be implemented and if he wants to have meals from home, he should seek a permission from court,” he mentioned.
Source: www.dailysabah.com