Pakistan arrests senior leader from ex-PM Imran Khan’s party
Police in Pakistan arrested early Wednesday a senior leader
of former Prime Minister Imran Khan’s political party on charges of threatening
the chief of the elections overseeing body and other government officials.
The arrest of Fawad Chaudhry, an outspoken critic of the
government, is a major setback for his party, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf, in
which he serves as vice president. The party quickly condemned the arrest and
demanded his release.
Khan also denounced the arrest, claiming on Twitter that it
left no doubt that Pakistan has become a place “devoid of rule of law.” He
urged followers to “stand up for our fundamental rights” to prevent the country
from drifting toward “a point of no return.”
The arrest took place during a predawn raid at Chaudhry’s
house in Lahore, the capital of eastern Punjab province, his family said.
Shireen Mazari, a spokesperson for Khan’s party, said Chaudhry was taken in
handcuffs straight to court by police in Lahore.
Chaudhry’s wife, Hiba Fawad, told reporters that security
forces were rough with her husband, pushed him into a vehicle and whisked him away.
“There is a procedure to follow if you want to arrest
someone,” she said. “It cannot happen that ten or twelve people enter a house,
detain someone, throw him into a vehicle and take him away without telling the
family where are they taking him.”
Footage released later by the party showed Chaudhry’s
supporters gathered at the court and throwing rose petals at him as police led
him toward a courtroom.
Angered over his arrest, hundreds of Chaudhry’s supporters
blocked a key highway in Jehlum, his home city in Punjab province, to demand
his release.
In a statement, Islamabad police said Chaudhry was arrested
on a complaint from the Election Commission of Pakistan on charges of
threatening the head of the elections overseeing body, Sikandar Sultan Raja,
and other officials. The threats were meant to prevent them from performing
their duties and incite people to violence against them, police said.
On Tuesday, Chaudhry criticized the elections overseeing
body for appointing a veteran journalist, Mohsin Naqvi, as caretaker chief
minister in Punjab. Khan’s party and its allies were in power in Punjab and
held majority seats in the provincial assembly but dissolved the house earlier
this month, a move that apparently sought to pressure the government in
Islamabad.
The dissolution of the provincial assembly set in motion
snap elections, which under the constitution are to be held within 90 days.
Chaudhry on Tuesday told reporters that Prime Minister
Shahbaz Sharif’s government could arrest Khan at any time. Khan, who remains
popular with a huge grassroots following, was ousted in a no-confidence vote in
Parliament last April and has been leading the opposition since.
A former cricket star turned Islamist politician, Khan was
wounded in a gun attack while leading a rally toward the capital, Islamabad,
last November. One of Khan’s supporters was killed and several others were
wounded in the shooting.
In October, the elections commission disqualified Khan from
holding public office for five years after finding he had unlawfully sold state
gifts and concealed assets as premier. Khan denies the charge and has filed a
motion with a court to challenge the commission.
Khan has also claimed that he was toppled in a plot by
Sharif and Washington, claims they both deny.
Along with the provincial assembly in Punjab, Khan’s allies
earlier this month also dissolved the legislature in northwestern Khyber
Pakhtunkhwa province, where Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf also had majority seats.
The party has demanded early federal elections, which Sharif’s government has
rejected, saying the vote will be held as scheduled later this year.