Pakistan’s election commission bars ex-PM Khan from office
Pakistan’s
elections commission on Friday disqualified former Prime Minister Imran Khan
from holding public office for five years, after finding he had unlawfully sold
state gifts and concealed assets as premier, officials said.
The move is
likely to deepen lingering political turmoil in the impoverished Islamic
country struggling with a spiraling economy, food shortages and the aftermath
of unprecedented floods this summer that killed 1,725 people, displaced
hundreds of thousands and triggered a surge in malaria and other flood-related
disease.
The
announcement by the commission comes as Khan, who was ousted in a no-confidence
vote in the parliament in April, has been rallying supporters against the new
government and calling for early elections.
Dozens of
angry Khan supporters gathered Friday outside the commission headquarters in
the capital, Islamabad, chanting slogans against its decision. Security forces
and paramilitary troops cordoned off the compound, blocking the crowd from
getting inside.
Later,
armored cars were seen rushing toward protesters as they tried to enter
Islamabad from the nearby city of Rawalpindi, where clashes between security
forces and demonstrators continued for hours. Khan’s supporters in Rawalpindi
burned tires and hurled rocks at police, who responded by firing tear gas and
swinging batons.
Interior
Minister Rana Sanaullah Khan, who is not related to the former premier, hailed
the decision and said that Imran Khan would now be tried in a court of law. Law
Minister Azam Nazir Tarar said the commission’s disqualification would last for
five years and that the body had also recommended that Khan be tried on charges
of concealing assets.
“You have
never earned so much money in your whole life than you did by selling the gifts
given to you” by heads of foreign countries, the interior minister said,
addressing Khan.
Officials
and legal experts said Friday’s decision meant Khan would automatically lose
his seat in the National Assembly. Under Pakistani law, the commission has the
authority to disqualify politicians from office but is separate from the
judiciary. Khan can appeal the decision in court.
A senior
leader in Khan’s Tehreek-e-Insaf party, Fawad Chaudhry, condemned the decision
and urged Khan’s supporters to rally in the streets. He said there was no ban
on Khan from leading his party. Khan’s lawyers have denied the allegations
against him, saying he “bought back” the gifts from the state and later sold
some of them lawfully.
Another
senior party leader, Shah Mahmood Qureshi, said that their legal team would
challenge the commission’s decision.
Earlier
Friday, Balkh Ser Khosa, a prominent lawyer, said the disqualification happened
because Khan unlawfully sold state gifts given to him by other countries when
he was in power. Khosa also said Khan hid the profits he earned from those
sales from tax authorities.
Elsewhere,
hundreds of Khan supporters blocked a key road in the northwestern city of
Peshawar, disrupting traffic. There were also small rallies in the port city of
Karachi and in other places.
The
government deployed additional security forces in Islamabad in efforts to
maintain law and order. Scenes from Islamabad — with armored vehicles with
troops pointing rifles at the crowds — were also seen in Rawalpindi and
elsewhere.
Demonstrators
also blocked a motorway in the northwestern city of Peshawar, where authorities
say scores of Khan’s supporters were staging a sit-in, disrupting traffic
between Islamabad and Peshawar. However, the Interior Ministry said the police
exercised restraint, and the situation was under control.
In recent
days, Khan had been expected to announce another march on Islamabad to try and
force the government of Prime Minister Shahbaz Sharif to hold snap elections.
After his
ouster, Khan led a march on Islamabad in May but called off the rally after
violence erupted and his supporters clashed with police. He has since been
promising to hold the final round of his political fight in Islamabad.
Later
Friday, Khan released a video in which he accuses Raja Sikandar — commission
chief appointed by Khan in 2020 — of a conspiracy aimed at “silencing” him.
Khan urged supporters to disperse peacefully and wait for his call for a march
on Islamabad.
The
commission’s decision followed a petition from Sharif’s coalition government,
seeking action against Khan over allegations that he unlawfully sold state
gifts he had received from heads of other states when he was in power. Such
gifting is not uncommon in many countries but while in Pakistan, leaders are
allowed to buy back the gifts, they are not usually sold. If they are sold,
individuals have to declare that as income.
Khan has
claimed that his government was toppled by Sharif under a U.S. plot — claims
that both the premier and Washington have denied. Sharif’s government has also
rejected Khan’s demand for early elections, saying the vote will be held as
scheduled, next year.
Sharif
tweeted later Friday that no one was above the law. Foreign Minister Bilawal
Bhutto Zardari said on Twitter that Khan, “who would spread lies about alleged
corruption of his political opponents has been caught red-handed.”
Khan, who
came to power after the 2018 elections, initially enjoyed excellent ties with
army chief Gen. Qamar Javed Bajwa. The military has directly ruled Pakistan for
more than half of its 75 years.
Later, Khan
openly resisted the appointment by Bajwa of a new spy chief to replace Lt. Gen.
Faiz Hameed, a Khan favorite. Bajwa eventually removed Hameed, which caused a
rift between Khan and Bajwa that eventually led to the prime minister’s ouster.