A Pakistani court has convicted and sentenced former prime minister Imran Khan and his wife to 17 years in prison after finding them guilty of retaining and selling state gifts, officials and his party said.
The couple pleaded not guilty when they were indicted last year. They were accused of selling the gifts, including jewellery from Saudi Arabia’s government, at prices far below their market value while he was in office.
Prosecutors said Khan and his wife made money from reselling the presents that they did not officially declare.
Under Pakistani law, for government officials and politicians to keep gifts received from foreign dignitaries, they must buy them at the assessed market value and declare any proceeds earned from selling them.
Khan’s spokesperson, Zulfiquar Bukhari, said the verdict in the graft case ignored basic principles of justice.
In a statement, he said that the “criminal liability was imposed without proof of intent, gain, or loss, relying instead on a retrospective reinterpretation of rules”.
Mr Bukhari said the court ruling “raised serious questions about the fairness and impartiality of the process, turning justice into a tool for selective prosecution”.
Khan’s opposition Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party denounced the verdict in a statement, calling it “a black chapter in history”, and said Khan was present in the court when the judge announced the verdict in the Adiala prison in the city of Rawalpindi.
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. His sisters have been denied every visit, even with clear court orders allowing access. There have been no phone calls, no… pic.twitter.com/VZm26zM4OF
— Kasim Khan (@Kasim_Khan_1999) November 27, 2025
Khan, 73, was ousted in a no-confidence vote in April 2022 and his party is in opposition in the parliament.
He has been serving multiple prison terms since 2023 on corruption convictions and other charges that the former prime minister and his supporters have alleged are aimed at blocking his political career.
Khan, a former international cricketer, was married to British TV producer and screenwriter Jemima Khan from 1995 to 2004. They have two adult sons, Sulaiman and Kasim.
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