ISLAMABAD: A team of the National Accountability Bureau will formally begin an investigation against Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) Chairman Imran Khan today.
An Islamabad Accountability Court had approved Imran Khan’s eight-day physical remand in the Al-Qadir Trust corruption case on Wednesday.
Security arrangements have been beefed up at and around the Police Lines in Islamabad after it was declared a sub-jail. Additional containers have also been dispatched.
Accountability Court Judge Muhammad Bashir had heard the reference against the PTI chief.
Imran Khan was arrested on Tuesday in a graft case, and presented before the accountability court at the Police Lines Headquarters in H-11/1 Islamabad today.
Imran’s counsels Khawaja Haris, Faisal Chaudhry, Ali Gohar, and Ali Bukhari appeared before the court.
The accountability bureau will investigate the former premier at the Police Lines. The NAB had sought Imran Khan’s 14-day remand.
At the outset of hearing, the country’s top anti-corruption body sought 14-day physical remand of the former premier.
To which Imran’s council contended that NAB has no jurisdiction in the case, adding the anti-graft watchdog also did not share inquiry report.
He maintained that a fair trial is Imran Khan’s fundamental right. “Imran Khan’s trial should be held in open court,” his counsel urged the court.
NAB prosecutor Sardar Muzaffar reported to the court that Imran Khan was shown arrest warrants at the time of his detention. He also assured Imran’s council that the necessary documentation would be provided.
“This is a corruption case which the UK’s National Crime Agency has probed,” he said, adding that the money received was meant to be transferred to the government of Pakistan.
“Instead of the government, the funds that were received were transferred to Bahria Town,” he said.
The prosecutor further said Imran Khan’s aide Shahzad Akbar had briefed him about the funds in a cabinet meeting, and the then prime minister ordered to keep the record sealed.
Imran Khan disputed the prosecutor’s statement and informed the court that the warrants were not shown to him during his arrest, but rather shown when he was transferred to the NAB office.
During the hearing, Imran Khan told the court he had not gone to the washroom for 24 hours, and asked for calling his personal physician Dr Faisal.
He feared he would be meted out the same treatment as ‘Maqsood Chaprasi’, alleging people were injected something that killed them slowly.
Imran’s lawyer Khawaja Haris told the court a building was constructed on the land of Al-Qadir Trust where people were getting free education.
Meanwhile, a medical report submitted to the NAB showed that Khan has been declared fit and he did not complain of any pain to the doctors examining him.
A medical board, comprising seven doctors from the Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences (PIMS) hospital and two doctors from the Polyclinic, examined Khan and conducted several tests.
The report submitted by the board, headed by Dr Rizwan Taj, showed that Khan’s blood pressure, sugar level, and heartbeat were normal after repeated tests.
Read more: Al Qadir Trust case: Imran’s 8-day physical remand approved


