Pakistan ex-PM Imran Khan’s apology accepted in contempt case
- Khan sent a written apology stemming from his outburst against a female judge that was seen as a threat, court officials and a defence lawyer said
- Former premier was ousted through a no-confidence vote in April and has been leading rallies to pressure the government to agree to snap elections
A Pakistani court on Monday accepted former Prime Minister Imran Khan’s written apology in a contempt case stemming from his outburst against a female judge that was seen as a threat, court officials and a defence lawyer said.
The ruling by the Islamabad High Court averted Khan’s possible disqualification to run for the next parliamentary elections. Khan initially refused to apologise for his remarks, but last month reversed course and submitted a written apology.
Khan’s lawyer, Babar Awan, said the court dismissed the contempt charge that had been issued last month in connection with the former premier’s controversial remarks about judge Zeba Chaudhry.
Khan was ousted through a no-confidence vote in April and since then, he has been leading rallies to pressure the government of Prime Minister Shahbaz Sharif to agree to snap elections. Khan claims his government was toppled by Sharif under a US plot.
Sharif and Washington both have denied the allegation.