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Pakistan-Khan standoff: What would justice look like to each side?

Pakistan’s latest political crisis began when police and security officials arrived at former Prime Minister Imran Khan’s Lahore residence last Tuesday after the controversial leader refused to appear for scheduled hearings in a case related to his handling of state gifts. The arrest operation quickly transformed into a siege as Mr. Khan’s supporters repelled the police.

Now, after days of violent clashes between law enforcement and activists from Mr. Khan’s political party, justice officials find themselves in a position where any decision will court controversy. 

Why We Wrote This

A violent standoff between supporters of former Prime Minister Imran Khan and Pakistani authorities has put pressure on the country’s legal system. Where does justice lie?

Mr. Khan and his supporters are unlikely to accept anything less than a complete exoneration. But after the standoff outside Mr. Khan’s Lahore residence last week, the government has effectively portrayed the crisis as a test case to ensure that Pakistan does not descend into anarchy and lawlessness. 

“The problem on Imran Khan’s end is that he’s making a mockery out of the system of justice,” says lawyer and political commentator Abdul Moiz Jaferii, “because [in] Pakistan – even with its very checkered past of the judiciary and the very checkered past of its politicians – you’ve never had an instance where politicians refuse to turn up to a court without consequence, and that’s what’s happening here.”

Pakistan is entering week two of a high-stakes legal standoff between authorities and former Prime Minister Imran Khan – a crisis that has raised serious questions about the fairness of the judiciary.

It all began when police and security officials arrived at Mr. Khan’s Lahore residence last Tuesday after the cricketer-turned-politician refused to appear for scheduled hearings in a case related to his handling of state gifts. The arrest operation quickly transformed into a siege as Mr. Khan’s supporters repelled the police. Yesterday, as police rounded up scores of his followers and the government termed his party a “clique of militants,” the controversial leader claimed that he had narrowly escaped assassination during the chaos this weekend.

Days of violent clashes between law enforcement and activists from Mr. Khan’s political party, the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI), have led to fears of institutional breakdown, and justice officials now find themselves in a position where any decision will court controversy. Mr. Khan and his supporters are unlikely to accept anything less than complete exoneration. But after the standoff last week, the government has portrayed the crisis as a test case to ensure that Pakistan does not descend into anarchy and lawlessness. 

Why We Wrote This

A violent standoff between supporters of former Prime Minister Imran Khan and Pakistani authorities has put pressure on the country’s legal system. Where does justice lie?

“The problem on Imran Khan’s end is that he’s making a mockery out of the system of justice,” says lawyer and political commentator Abdul Moiz Jaferii, “because [in] Pakistan – even with its very checkered past of the judiciary and the very checkered past of its politicians – you’ve never had an instance where politicians refuse to turn up to a court without consequence, and that’s what’s happening here.”

Akhtar Soomro/Reuters

Police and security officials arrived at Imran Khan’s residence last Tuesday after the former prime minister, pictured during a March 17 interview in Lahore, Pakistan, refused to appear for scheduled hearings in a case related to his handling of state gifts. An Islamabad court has since canceled Mr. Khan’s arrest warrant, and the case has been adjourned until March 30.

Court compromise

An Islamabad court canceled Mr. Khan’s arrest warrant after he turned up for a hearing at the judicial complex on Saturday, though he was unable to enter the building due to clashes between his supporters and security personnel, and the case has been adjourned until March 30. Court officials reported today that Mr. Khan was also granted a weeklong bail in new terrorism cases related to the violence incited in the capital this weekend.

“It makes no sense to me as a citizen of the country that a person who … continues to flout the law should receive the sort of relief from the courts that he has received,” says Bilal Kayani, an adviser to Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif.

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