City
Epaper

Imran Khan's son alleges Pakistan "deliberately refusing" visas to prevent family visit

By ANI | Updated: February 5, 2026 09:15 IST

Islamabad [Pakistan], February 5 : Kasim Khan, son of jailed PTI founder Imran Khan, alleged that authorities are deliberately ...

Open in App

Islamabad [Pakistan], February 5 : Kasim Khan, son of jailed PTI founder Imran Khan, alleged that authorities are deliberately blocking visa applications filed by him and his brother, preventing them from travelling to Pakistan to meet their father.

In a post on X on Wednesday, Kasim wrote, "My brother and I are trying to travel to Pakistan to see our father. For 914 days, he has been held in solitary confinement while his health deteriorates and he is denied access to independent medical care.

"Now the government is deliberately refusing to process our visas. Denying a prisoner treatment is cruel. Denying his children the right to see him is collective punishment," he added.

The matter comes amid mounting concerns over Imran Khan's health and access to treatment, Pakistani daily Dawn reported.

Kasim also appealed for international intervention, writing, "I call on international human rights organisations and governments to speak out and act before irreversible harm is done."

Kasim and his elder brother, Suleiman, currently reside in London with their mother, Jemima Goldsmith.

The development follows the government's acknowledgement last week that Imran Khan had been taken to the Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences, days after reports regarding his treatment surfaced in mainstream media, Dawn reported.

The PTI subsequently condemned what it described as the "secretly transferring" of Imran Khan to PIMS, accusing authorities of keeping both his family and party leadership uninformed while denying him access to personal doctors.

Earlier, opposition leader in the National Assembly Mahmood Khan Achakzai wrote to Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, requesting his "personal intervention" to allow medical examinations by Imran Khan's "trusted" physicians, Dawn reported.

Imran Khan's sons had earlier disclosed in December 2025 that they had applied for visas and were planning to visit Pakistan in January.

However, reports emerging this week claimed that authorities were refusing to issue visas to Kasim and Suleiman, further fuelling concerns over access to the former premier.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

BusinessPM Modi highlights 11 years of PMMY, calls it a boost to self-employment among youth

NationalPM Modi highlights 11 years of PMMY, calls it a boost to self-employment among youth

InternationalAustralia PM Albanese welcomes US pause on Iran strikes, calls for de-escalation

International"Iranian regime cannot be trusted in any shape or form," says Former US Treasury Counterterrorism analyst

TechnologyS. Korea posts largest-ever current account surplus in Feb on chip upcycle

International Realted Stories

International"Is Pakistan doing the bidding of China?" Former US Treasury Counterterrorism analyst questions Pak role in US-Iran mediation

InternationalIsrael backs US pause on Iran strikes, says ceasefire deal 'does not include' Lebanon

InternationalIsrael backs Trump decision to suspend strikes on Iran, says offensive against Hezbollah to continue

InternationalMagic Castle Fire: Blaze Erupts at Historic Structure in Hollywood

InternationalNorth Korea fires short-range ballistic missiles in back-to-back launch