PTI livid after leaders arrested from outside Adiala
By Ikram Junaidi
2024-11-13
ISLAMABAD: Several PTI leaders were briefly detained on Tuesday outside Adiala Jail while attempting to meet the party`s incarcerated chairman, Imran Khan, sparking condemnation from the party.
Opposition leaders in the National Assembly and Senate, Omar Ayub Khan and Shibli Faraz, former National Assembly speaker Asad Qaiser, Opposition Leader in the Punjab Assembly Malik Ahmad Khan Bhachar, and Sunni Itte-had Council (SIC) Chairman Sahibzada Hamid Raza were among those arrested.
The police claimed that the party leaders were arrested under Section 144 of the Code of Criminal Procedure (CrPC) but were later released with a warning.
Mr Qaiser told Dawn that PTI had approached the Islamabad High Court (IHC) after being denied access to meet Imran Khan. `The court summoned the jail superintendent, who assured us that we could meet Khan Sahib. On Tuesday, we arrived around2pm with the court order in hand, but the jail authorities still barred our entry,` he said.
`It feels like there`s a law of the jungle in Pakistan. We were taken to a nearby police post and, after contacting others through our mobile phones, the media arrived, and we were eventually allowed to leave,` he said.
`We have decided to lodge an FIR, submit a privilege motion and raise the matter in standing committees,` he added, denouncing the act as a violation of basic human rights and contempt of theIHC`s directive.
The PTI leaders also accused Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, Punjab Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz and Inspector General of Police in Punjab Dr Usman Anwar for issuing orders of their illegal detention.
A police official told Dawn that the PTI leaders were taken to a police post after they ignored warnings about the prohibition of gatherings due to Section 144. However, they were soon freed after being issued a warning. `If they had refused to leave, the police would have taken legalaction against them,` a senior police official said.
`Absolutely shameful` The PTI also condemned the incident on social media.
`Absolutely shameful! Omar Ayub Khan, Shibli Faraz, Asad Qaiser, Ahmed Bhachar and Sahibzada Hamid Raza have been arrested outside Adiala Jail for simply exercising their right to meet with Imran Khan, as permitted by law.
This should alarm anyone who values the rule of law, as it shows how basic freedoms are being trampled upon,` the party said on the social media platform X (formerly Twitter).
A video posted online by the party showed Omar Ayub in a vehicle with police officers nearby, and Hamid Raza being pulled aside by uniformed personnel. A police van was also visible in the video.
Later, at a press conference, Mr Faraz decried the police action, calling it a breach of constitutional rights. He said the party leaders who went to meet Imran Khan were arrested even though they did not hold any rallies or public meetings or show any aggression.
In a statement, PTI`s Central Information Secretary Sheikh Waqas Akram denounced the government`s actions as a violation of democratic freedoms and called for legal consequences for those responsible.
He denounced the government`s `disregard for the judiciary` and for allegedly committing contempt of court, urging thecourt to take stern measures against those responsible for violating the law.
Mr Akram said that the senior PTI leaders waited until 3pm outside Adiala Jail but were not allowed to meet Imran Khan.
However, when they attempted to leave, they were taken into custody.
He said the government was `crossing all limits of barbarism and brutalities` as the PTI leaders, workers and supporters were being detained and harassed in total disregard for the law.
Maryam`s trip Separately, the PTI lashed out at the Sharif family over Maryam Nawaz`s visit to Geneva for what the party called a `minor medical procedure`.
The party`s spokesperson accused Ms Nawaz of abandoning the residents of Punjab, who are facing severe smog, inflation and rising crime, while she seeks treatment abroad at public expense.
Mohammad Asghar in Rawalpindi also contributed to this report