KP Chief Minister Sohail Afridi, Aleema Khan and accompanying lawyers were unable to meet the Chief Justice of the Islamabad High Court.
Chief Minister Afridi said their case was not heard and that they received a message from the IHC Chief Justice stating he could not meet them.
He added that next Tuesday they would gather both outside the High Court and Adiala Jail. Speaking about governance in the province, he said he remained in contact with his administration and emphasized that unlike Zardari and Sharif, he did not rise through a “parachute,” but worked his way up from the grassroots within the organisation.
The Advocate General of KP, in an informal conversation, confirmed that the IHC Chief Justice had refused to meet the chief minister.
Earlier in Rawalpindi, Afridi ended his sit-in, saying he had exhausted all constitutional and legal avenues. He questioned what option was left for him to meet his party founder.
He added that despite court orders, neither he nor other leaders were allowed to meet the party founder yesterday. He said the founder’s sisters were previously denied a meeting as well, were dragged by their hair on Adiala Road, and humiliated. “All this is being done to break the founder; Bushra Bibi is being targeted,” he alleged.
The KP chief minister said he spent the entire day and night waiting but was still denied permission to meet the PTI founder.
It is pertinent to mention that CM Afridi staged a sit-in last night after being denied permission to meet PTI founder Imran Khan.
Separately, PTI founder Imran Khan’s sister Aleema Khan filed a contempt of court petition after being denied a meeting with her brother. The petition names the Superintendent of Adiala Jail, the Federal Secretary for Interior, and the Punjab Home Department Secretary as respondents.
Earlier, Kasim Khan, son of former prime minister Imran Khan said on Friday that they had no contact with the incarcerated PTI founder for over a month despite court orders.
“My father has been under arrest for 845 days. For the past six weeks, he has been kept in solitary confinement in a death cell with zero transparency,” he wrote on X.
“Let it be clear: the Pakistani government and its handlers will be held fully accountable legally, morally and internationally for my father’s safety and for every consequence of this inhumane isolation.”
Kasim called on the international community, global human rights organisations and every democratic voice to intervene urgently.