Pakistani court sentences ex-PM Imran Khan and his wife to 14 and 7 
		years in prison in graft case
		
		 
		Send a link to a friend  
 
		
		
		 [January 17, 2025]  
		By MUNIR AHMED 
		
		ISLAMABAD (AP) — A Pakistani court on Friday sentenced the country’s 
		already-imprisoned former Prime Minister Imran Khan and his wife to 14 
		and seven years in jail after finding them guilty of corruption, 
		officials and his lawyer said. 
		 
		It's yet another blow for the former premier who has been behind the 
		bars since 2023. 
		 
		The couple are accused of accepting a gift of land from a real estate 
		tycoon in exchange for laundered money when Khan was in power. 
		 
		Prosecutors say the businessman, Malik Riaz, was then allowed by Khan to 
		pay fines that were imposed on him in another case from the same 
		laundered money of 190 million British pounds ($240 million) that was 
		returned to Pakistan by British authorities in 2022 to deposit to the 
		national exchequer. 
		 
		Khan has denied wrongdoing and insisted since his arrest in 2023 that 
		all the charges against him are a plot by rivals to keep him from 
		returning to office. 
		 
		Bibi was taken into custody by prison officials after the announcement 
		of the verdict, according to officials. She had earlier served a prison 
		sentence in another graft case until she was freed on bail by a court in 
		October. She recently led a rally to demand her husband's release. 
		
		
		  
		
		Faisal Chaudhry, a defense lawyer, said the court verdict could be 
		challenged in the superior courts. 
		 
		Shortly after the announcement of the verdict, lawmakers from Khan's 
		Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf, or PTI, party rallied outside the parliament 
		in the capital, Islamabad, saying the former premier had been wrongly 
		punished. 
		 
		“This is a bogus case, and we will approach an appeals court against 
		this decision,” said Omar Ayub Khan, a senior party leader who is not 
		related to the former premier. 
		 
		[to top of second column] 
			 | 
            
             
            
			  
            Pakistan's former Prime Minister Imran Khan, right, with his wife 
			Bushra Bibi, speaks to the media before signing documents to submit 
			surety bond over his bails in different cases, at an office of 
			Lahore High Court in Lahore, Pakistan, on July 17, 2023. (AP Photo/K.M. 
			Chaudary, File) 
            
			
			
			  
            Imran Khan was ousted in a no-confidence vote in parliament in April 
			2022, had previously been convicted on charges of corruption, 
			revealing official secrets and violating marriage laws in three 
			separate verdicts and sentenced to 10, 14 and seven years 
			respectively. Under Pakistani law, he is to serve the terms 
			concurrently — meaning, the length of the longest of the sentences. 
			 
			Some of Khan’s supporters were also present outside the Adiala 
			prison in the city of Rawalpindi, and they chanted slogans against 
			the government, demanding the release of their leader. 
			 
			On Thursday, Information Minister Attaullah Tarar told reporters in 
			Islamabad that there was “irrefutable evidence” against Khan and his 
			wife in the “mega corruption scandal.” Tarar said that Khan even did 
			not tell his own Cabinet members about the money that was returned 
			to Pakistan by Britain. 
			 
			Tarar also claimed that Khan built a new sprawling house in the 
			eastern city of Lahore after giving benefits to the business tycoon, 
			and that he was unable to prove that from where he got the money 
			from to build it. 
			 
			The latest development came a day after Khan's PTI party held a 
			crucial round of talks with representatives of the government of 
			Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif to demand the release of all political 
			detainees, including Khan and other party leaders. 
			 
			Sharif became prime minister following the February 2024 election, 
			which PTI claims was rigged. 
			
			All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved  |