04-01-2026
By SJA Jafri + Bureau Report
ISLAMABAD/ KARACHI/ LAHORE: A court in Pakistan has sentenced several journalists and social media commentators to life imprisonment after convicting them of inciting violence during riots in 2023 linked to the arrest of former Prime Minister Imran Khan.
An anti-terrorism court judge, Tahir Abbas Sipra, announced the verdict on Friday in the capital, Islamabad, after completing trials held in absentia.
The convicted include former army officers-turned YouTubers Adil Raja and Syed Akbar Hussain; journalists Wajahat Saeed Khan, Sabir Shakir and Shaheen Sehbai, commentator Haider Raza Mehdi, and analyst Moeed Pirzada, according to the court’s decision.
None of the accused was present in court as they have been living abroad after leaving Pakistan in recent years to avoid arrest.
The convictions stem from cases registered after unrest in May 2023 saw some of Khan’s supporters attack military facilities and government property in response to his brief arrest in a corruption case.
Since then, the Pakistani government and military have launched a sweeping crackdown on Khan’s party and dissenting voices, using anti-terrorism laws and military trials to prosecute hundreds accused of incitement and attacks on state institutions.
The Committee to Protect Journalists said in 2023 that the investigations amounted to retaliation against critical reporting.
“Authorities must immediately drop these investigations and cease the relentless intimidation and censorship of the media,” CPJ Asia program coordinator Beh Lih Yi said.
Journalist Sabir Shakir, who previously hosted a popular television program on ARY TV before leaving Pakistan, told media that he was aware of his conviction.
He said that he wasn’t in the country when police accused him of encouraging mob violence.
“The ruling against me and others is nothing but a political victimization,” Shakir told media.
Under Friday’s court order, those convicted have the right to file appeals within seven days. The court also directed police to arrest them and transfer them to prison should they return to Pakistan.
Last week, a Pakistani military court has sentenced 60 civilians to jail time ranging from two to 10 years in connection with attacks on military facilities after the arrest of former Prime Minister Imran Khan in 2023.
Those sentenced on Thursday include a relative of Khan as well as two retired military officers.
“The Nation, Government, and the Armed Forces remain steadfast in their commitment to upholding justice and ensuring that the inviolable writ of the state is maintained,” the military’s ISPR media wing said on Thursday, adding that the Court Martials had now concluded.
Khan’s arrest on May 9, 2023, sparked countrywide protests that saw people attack and ransack military installations in an unprecedented backlash against Pakistan’s powerful army, which has ruled the South Asian country directly for decades at a time and still wields enormous influence.
Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party said his nephew was among those convicted and he was sentenced to a decade in prison.
“Conducting trials in military courts has undermined the fundamental rights of citizens,” Khan was quoted as saying by his party on social media.
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