Additional security personnel have been deployed in the Superior Court of Islamabad, for the call for protest for the Pakistan Tehreek-E-Insaf (PTI).
The PTI has requested a demonstration today to express solidarity with the Judiciary.
Consequently, security around the Superior Court of Islamabad and the surrounding areas have intensified, with the forces of the police and border (FC) that are parked in a greater number.
Security agencies are on a maximum alert to maintain the law and order, ensuring public safety and avoiding adverse incidents.
The hardened security measures occur after Pakistan Tehreek-E-Insaf (PTI), Imran Khan, instructed the party to prepare for an important national movement against the titular government.
“I begin to prepare for a mass movement; I will not call people to Islamabad, but we will launch the movement through Pakistan,” Imran transmitted through his sister, Aleema Khan, who spoke with the media on Monday.
Speaking outside the prison, Aleema Khan declared that his brother promised to resist all forms of oppression and torture, declaring that he would never bow to subjugation.
“Imran Khan has made it clear that even if he spends his whole life behind bars, he will not surrender to pressure,” he added.
She highlighted the key points shared by her brother, stating that despite being a former prime minister, Imran is denied the basic rights granted to common prisoners.
“In the last eight months, only a brief conversation with their children has been allowed and it has not been allowed to meet their sisters,” said Aleema. She said the efforts to send her books have also been blocked by the prison authorities, adding: “They have even denied access to their doctors.”
Imran, through his sister, reaffirmed her position: “No matter the scope of torture, I will never accept subjugation. I will not give up.”
Aleem also mentioned that his brother believes that his wife, Bushra Bibi, was placed in jail as part of a broader effort to apply pressure on him.
The PTI also expressed concern after the observation of the IHC earlier this month that the appeals presented by former Prime Minister Imran Khan and his wife, Bushra Bibi, challenging his conviction in the case of £ 190 million, cannot be heard this year due to a strong accumulation of pending cases.
The call of the Protest Party had arrived on the same day that a Largert bank of 13 members of the Pakistan Supreme Court began the hearing of the revision requests of July 12, a verdict that Pakistan Tehreek-E-Insaf (PTI) seats reserved in the national and provincial legislatures had been delivered in the national and provincial legislatures, but without six of the original judges of the sentence.