Islamabad court declares Omar Ayub proclaimed offender

Court also issues permanent arrest warrants for Ayub

ISLAMABAD:

A district and sessions court in Islamabad on Saturday declared Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) leader Omar Ayub a proclaimed offender in a case related to the November 26 protest.

The court also issued permanent arrest warrants for Ayub. Judicial Magistrate Shaista Kundi heard the case.

The court declared Ayub a proclaimed offender after he repeatedly failed to appear despite being summoned.

A case has been registered against Ayub at the Secretariat Police Station under Section 144 and other relevant provisions.

Read: Ali Amin Gandapur, Omar Ayub declared proclaimed offenders in 'Haqeeqi Azadi March' cases

In February, a local court declared PTI leaders Ali Amin Gandapur and Omar Ayub as proclaimed offenders in two cases related to the "Haqeeqi Azadi March" and issued perpetual arrest warrants against them.

Senior Civil Judge Mubashir Hassan Chishti passed the orders while hearing the cases registered at Bara Kahu police station. The court noted that despite repeated summonses, both accused had failed to appear before the court.

In March, an anti-terrorism court (ATC) in Islamabad extended the interim bail of PTI leaders in more than 230 cases related to the November 26 Sangjani rally, protests outside the Supreme Court, and other demonstrations.

ATC Judge Abul Hasnat Muhammad Zulqarnain, who heard the case, also ordered authorities not to arrest the PTI leaders until May 21.

PTI leaders, including Umer Niazi, Raoof Hasan and Azam Swati, appeared before the court. The court directed both sides to present arguments at the next hearing. Multiple cases have been registered against the PTI leaders at Tarnol, Ramna, Aabpara and Secretariat police stations, among others.

Case

The November 26 protests were sparked by a call from former prime minister Imran Khan and his party, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI), for a “do-or-die” sit-in in Islamabad. Thousands of supporters marched on the capital demanding the release of jailed PTI leaders, including Khan, and the resignation of the government over alleged rigging in the 2024 general elections.

The demonstrations turned violent as protesters attempted to breach barricades and enter the capital’s high-security Red Zone, leading to clashes with police and paramilitary forces, resulting in multiple deaths and injuries.

The case has a long history, as an anti-terrorism court in Rawalpindi sentenced 82 PTI workers to four months in prison and fined them Rs15,000 each after they pleaded guilty to taking part in violent protests on November 26, 2024, which left three Rangers personnel and a policeman dead.

The accused admitted they were incited by party leadership, sought leniency, and pledged not to join future protests, while the Supreme Court separately granted bail to PTI Senator Ejaz Chaudhry and Farhat Abbas in May 9 cases, directing completion of the trial within four months.

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