• Toshakhana case: Pakistan court dismisses Imran Khan's plea seeking suspension of arrest warrant

    International
    Toshakhana case: Pakistan court dismisses Imran Khan's plea seeking suspension of arrest warrant

    Authorities are legally permitted to keep gifts if they pay a pre-determined price, often a fraction of the gift's value.

    Digital Desk: On Monday, a judge dismissed a
    petition submitted by Pakistan's former prime minister Imran Khan seeking to
    have his non-bailable arrest warrant in the Toshakhana case lifted.



    On February 28, Additional Sessions
    Judge Zafar Iqbal issued a non-bailable arrest warrant against the
    cricketer-turned-politician for failing to appear in court in the Toshakhana
    case on a regular basis.



    Khan has
    been accused of buying presents for profit, including a costly Graff wristwatch
    he obtained as premier at a reduced price from the state storehouse known as
    Toshakhana.



    He is accused of
    concealing details of gifts he received from the Toshakhana, a repository where
    gifts given to government officials by foreign diplomats are held, in his asset
    declarations.



    Authorities are
    legally permitted to keep gifts if they pay a pre-determined price, often a
    fraction of the gift's value.



    On Sunday, the PTI head applied to the Lahore High Court (LHC) for
    post-arrest release after an Islamabad police squad arrived at his Zaman Park
    mansion to arrest him for failing to appear in court in the Toshakhana case.
    But, after Khan eluded capture, the police crew returned empty-handed.



    Khan has not appeared in court
    since November of last year, when he was injured in an assassination attempt
    during a rally in the Punjab district of Wazirabad. After being shot during the
    assassination attempt, Khan was granted interim bail by a special court in
    Islamabad.



    He has since had his bail extended
    owing to medical reasons.



    Khan was deposed in April after
    losing a no-confidence vote in his leadership, which he said was part of a
    US-led conspiracy to destabilise him as a result of his independent foreign
    policy decisions on Russia, China, and Afghanistan.



    The PTI
    leader, who took office in 2018, is Pakistan's first Prime Minister to be
    deposed in a no-confidence vote in Parliament.