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Imran Khan vows legal action against policemen who raided his Lahore residence

Imran Khan vows legal action against policemen who raided his Lahore residence

Mr Khan’s wife, Bushra Bibi, was present in the house during the police raid (File)

Lahore:

Pakistan’s ousted Prime Minister Imran Khan has vowed legal action against the security officials involved in the brutal thrashing of his party workers during a raid and search operation at his Zaman Park residence here.

While Mr Khan was in Islamabad on Saturday to make a court appearance, more than 10,000 armed Punjab Police personnel carried out a massive operation at his Zaman Park residence and arrested dozens of his supporters. The police claimed to have recovered weapons and petrol bombs from Khan’s house.

Mr Khan’s supporters managed to occupy his residence late on Saturday after the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf chairman returned from Islamabad after attending a hearing in the Toshakhana case.

Heavy machinery was used by the Punjab Police to barge into Khan’s residence. Mr Khan’s wife – Bushra Bibi – was present in the house during the police raid.

The 70-year-old former prime minister said he would take legal action against those violating the veil and sanctity of the house.

“The attack on my house today was first and foremost contempt of court,” he said, adding that police raided his house without a search warrant.

In a series of tweets, he claimed, “We had agreed that an SP with one of our men would execute the search warrant as we knew that otherwise they would plant stuff on their own, which they did.”

Mr Khan questioned the officials under which law they broke the gate, felled the trees and entered the house. What was worse, he said, was that the police raided his house after he appeared in the Islamabad court.

“Bushra Bibi, a completely private non-political person, was alone at home. This is a complete violation of the Islamic principle of chadar and chaar divari sanctity.” [veil and walls]Mr Khan said.

He said the issue of contempt, violation of the sanctity of the house and violence against his servants and domestic workers would be taken up in the court.

Meanwhile, the Lahore police on Sunday booked Khan and over 1,000 PTI workers on charges of terrorism in two cases. The number of cases against Khan has gone up to 97.

Police claimed to have recovered rifles, Kalashnikov, bullets, marbles and petrol bombs from his house during the search operation.

The police had also removed all the encroachments in Zaman Park for the past several months and destroyed the “bunker” built to attack law enforcement agencies.

Senior PTI leader Fawad Chaudhary told reporters on Sunday that Khan and his party would approach the court against the police attack on Khan’s residence. “The police have violated the sanctity of Khan’s house,” he said.

Meanwhile, Interior Minister Rana Sanaullah said the government would consult its legal team to assess whether a process could be initiated to ban Khan’s party.

Sanaullah said, “Terrorists were hiding in Zaman Park. Weapons, petrol bombs etc have been recovered from Imran Khan’s residence, which is enough evidence to file a case against PTI for being a terrorist organisation.”

On the government’s plan to initiate the process of declaring PTI as a banned organisation, the minister said: “Primarily it is a judicial process to declare any party as an accused. However, we will consult our legal team on the issue.” ” Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif appeared to agree with his niece PMN-L’s senior vice president Maryam Nawaz’s claim that Mr Khan’s party was a “terrorist organisation”.

“If anyone had any doubts, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf chairman Imran Niazi’s actions in the last few days have exposed his fascist and terrorist tendencies,” Sharif said.

Police on Sunday secured one-day remand of over 100 PTI workers arrested during Saturday’s operation.

As the Punjab Police has completely withdrawn security from the PTI chief, the Gilgit-Baltistan province where his party is in power is providing him security.

Cricketer-turned-politician Imran was disqualified by the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) in October last year for not sharing details of the sale. The apex election body later filed a complaint in the district court to punish him under criminal laws for selling gifts received as the country’s prime minister.

Mr Khan was ousted from power in April last year after losing a no-confidence vote, becoming the first Pakistani prime minister to be voted out by the National Assembly.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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