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Pakistan’s Imran Khan relents, allows police search of home for wanted suspects

Former Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan arriving at courthouse
Former Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan arrives for a court appearance in Lahore on Friday.
(K.M. Chaudary / Associated Press)
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Former Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan dialed down his campaign of defiance Friday, saying he would allow a police search of his home over allegations that he is harboring suspects wanted in connection with violence during anti-government protests by his supporters.

Khan, who is facing about 100 legal cases, also appeared before a court in his hometown of Lahore to seek protection from arrest in multiple terrorism cases that authorities have raised against him.

Pakistan’s top opposition leader also condemned days of violence in which his supporters attacked public property and military installations after he was dragged out of a courtroom and arrested in a graft case in the capital, Islamabad, last week. At least 10 people were killed in clashes between his supporters and police across the country.

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The rioting subsided only after Pakistan’s Supreme Court ordered Khan’s release. Police sought Khan on charges of inciting supporters of his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party to violence. He denies the allegation, saying he was in the custody of the National Accountability Bureau in a graft case when the clashes erupted.

Khan appeared conciliatory before an anti-terrorism court in Lahore, the provincial capital of Punjab. The judge granted him protection from arrest in three terrorism cases until early in June.

“Yes, I condemn it,” Khan told reporters at the Lahore court, speaking of the rampage by his supporters. “There is no Pakistani who will not condemn the violence.”

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Pakistan is in turmoil following the arrest of popular opposition leader and former Prime Minister Imran Khan.

After Khan’s release from arrest last week and return to Lahore, police surrounded his home, alleging that he was sheltering in his upscale residence of Zaman Park between 30 and 40 suspects linked to the violence.

Police, who have some 300 officers deployed around Khan’s compound, threatened to raid the premises unless the suspects were handed over. The standoff was resolved with an agreement for the police to search the home later Friday.

Police separately announced that they arrested six more suspects in Khan’s neighborhood, allegedly as they were trying to flee. They had previously arrested eight others in the area, and a total of more than 4,500 suspects across the country.

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A former cricket star-turned-Islamist politician, Khan was ousted by a no-confidence vote in parliament last year. He has claimed his ouster was illegal and a Western conspiracy — allegations that his successor, Prime Minister Shahbaz Sharif, denies.

Pakistani police arrest at least 50 suspects in the mob lynching of a man who was in custody on suspicion of committing blasphemy against Islam.

Khan remains hugely popular among grassroots followers — though two of his lawmakers and several politicians quit his party over the recent violence — and has campaigned against Sharif’s government, demanding early elections.

His campaign, arrest and the subsequent violence have deepened the political turmoil and economic crisis in Pakistan.

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