A
guilty verdict in the case could exclude Khan from national
elections that are due to be held by November, legal experts
have said.
The halt comes after the high court asked a trial court to look
into whether a legal complaint filed by the country's election
commission, as part of an inquiry against Khan, constituted a
criminal proceeding, his lawyer Naeem Panjhuta and several local
TV news outlets said.
Khan's legal team had challenged the commission's complaint,
arguing that it was not a criminal case and that the judge
conducting the trial was biased against Khan.
The high court, however, turned down Khan's appeal to remove the
trial court judge from hearing the case. It is not known when
the case will resume, though the halt is expected to be brief.
Khan's spokesman Farrukh Habib hailed the higher court's
decision.
The trial, which is in its final stage, relates to an inquiry
conducted by the election commission which found Khan guilty of
unlawfully selling state gifts during his tenure as prime
minister from 2018 to 2022.
Khan has denied any wrongdoing.
The 70-year-old cricketer-turned-politician was accused of
misusing his premiership to buy and sell gifts in state
possession that were received during visits abroad and worth
more than 140 million Pakistani rupees ($635,000).
The gifts included watches given by a royal family, according to
government officials, who have alleged previously that Khan's
aides sold them in Dubai.
His tenure as prime minister was cut short when opponents won a
no-confidence vote against him last year, which Khan alleges was
passed with the help of the country's powerful military. The
military denies any role in the matter.
Khan's targeting of the military has raised political
temperatures, and his brief arrest in May on corruption charges
sparked violent protests in the country.
(Reporting by Asif Shahzad; editing by Jason Neely, Miral Fahmy
and Sharon Singleton)
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