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Violence deepens political, economic instability
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Tensions douse hopes for an IMF deal
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Reprieve for Khan comes as a setback for military
(Recasts throughout with details, background)
By Gibran Naiyyar Peshimam and Asif Shahzad
ISLAMABAD, May 11 (Reuters) - Pakistan's Supreme Court
on Thursday ruled that former Prime Minister Imran Khan's arrest
was illegal, his lawyer said, two days after his detention on
graft allegations triggered deadly violence, escalating his
tussle with the powerful military.
The protests coincide with Pakistan's worst economic crisis
in decades, with record high inflation, anaemic growth and IMF
funding delayed for months, prompting concerns that the country
could default on its external payment obligations.
The reprieve for Khan, 70, comes as a setback for the
military, which has ruled the South Asian nation for almost half
its history through three coups, a day after it said the
violence by Khan's supporters who rampaged through army
installations was "pre-planned" and ordered by his party
leadership.
Khan, a cricket star-turned-politician who analysts and
opponents say was brought to power through a rigged election in
2018 by the generals, has blamed the military for his ouster
from office in April 2022.
He has also alleged that an attempt on his life in November
was plotted by a top army general at the country's
Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI).
The army has denied both allegations of bringing him to power, his ouster and of the assassination attempt.
"The Supreme Court reversed all legal proceedings against Imran Khan ... he has been asked to present himself in the Islamabad High Court on Friday morning," lawyer Babar Awan told reporters. Awan said the court ruled that Khan was now under its custody and not of the anti-graft agency, adding he would spend the night in the same police guest house as before with permission to see up to 10 people from friends and family.
'WE WILL ARREST HIM AGAIN' It was not immediately clear when he would be allowed to go home. Undeterred by his ouster and the assassination attempt, Khan has led countrywide protest campaigns to pressure the government to call early elections scheduled for later this year. The graft case is one of more than 100 registered against him in which, if convicted, he could face a ban from holding public office. "We will arrest him again," said Interior Minister Rana Sanaullah. Khan, who was accused in the graft case of land fraud worth up to seven billion rupees ($24.70 million), denies any wrongdoing. After Khan's arrest, hundreds of protesters blocked highways, main entry and exit routes to all major cities, attacking and burning state buildings, police and public vehicles and rampaged through army installations.
Nearly 2,000 people were arrested and at least eight killed,
prompting the government to call out the army to help restore
order. Khan told the court that he was manhandled at the time of
his arrest and hit with a stick, according to local ARY TV.
The streets were mostly quiet on Thursday except for
sporadic protests.
On Tuesday, Khan was picked up by heavily armed paramilitary police from Islamabad High Court premises where he had arrived in a wheelchair, shoved into an armoured car and whisked away. Local TV footage showed Khan walking towards the Supreme Court on Thursday, wearing a traditional blue shalwar kameez, a black waistcoat and dark glasses.
The political crisis is eroding hopes that Pakistan can get its much needed programme with the IMF back on track soon. While noisy politics generating volatility is nothing new for Pakistan and its investors, it "really complicated the discussion with the IMF", said Cathy Hepworth, head of emerging market debt at PGIM Fixed Income. "It just delays and complicates decisions." <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ANALYSIS-Pakistan’s deepening political crisis douses hopes for IMF relief NEWSMAKER-Imran Khan, the cricket star who ditched playboy image to rule Pakistan ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^> (Reporting by Gibran Naiyyar Peshimam and Asif Shahzad in Islamabad, Ariba Shahid in Karachi, Mubasher Bukhari in Lahore and Gul Yousafzai in Quetta; Writing by Shivam Patel; Editing by Krishna N. Das, Raju Gopalakrishnan, Frances Kerry and Nick Macfie)