TTAP leaders came to the Supreme Court to support Imran as his trials were being heard.
ISLAMABAD (Web Desk): In response to former Prime Minister Imran Khan’s health issues, the opposition coalition Tehreek-i-Tahafuz-i-Ayin-i-Pakistan (TTAP) declared on Wednesday that it will end its days-long sit-in at Parliament House.
Even though the demonstration came to an end, TTAP restated the family’s demand that Imran Khan be given unrestricted access to his personal doctors and be permitted to hold private meetings with his family members while he is incarcerated.
As Imran’s cases were being heard earlier in the day, TTAP leaders went to the Supreme Court to express their support for him. TTAP spokesperson Akhunzada Hussain Yousafzai informed the media that “Mahmood Khan Achakzai, Allama Raja Nasir Abbas, Barrister Gohar Ali Khan, and others have reached the Supreme Court.” After returning from the court, he said, the leadership will convene a news conference to discuss future plans, including how to respond to the crackdown on PTI supporters.
According to the PTI, Imran’s three sisters, Aleema Khan, Noreen Niazi, and Uzma Khanum, met with Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Chief Minister Sohail Afridi before to the hearing to talk about his health, legal issues, and other difficulties.
TTAP had previously released a list of five “immediate and unconditional demands,” the main one being that Imran’s personal physicians, Drs. Aasim Yusuf and Faisal Sultan, be granted complete, private access so they could do independent medical examinations. Additionally, the alliance called for routine follow-ups and asked that certified copies of all lab results, scans, X-rays, and medical tests be given to his personal doctors.
Imran’s personal physicians need to be free to offer their own medical advice without intervention from the government’s medical board, according to TTAP. Insisting that such carelessness must never happen again, the alliance also sought a documented justification for any delays or impediments in his treatment.
Senior PTI leaders and Imran’s family have made several attempts to see him at Adiala Jail, but the majority of these trips have been denied. Salman Safdar, a PTI lawyer, was nominated as a friend of court after the Supreme Court intervened on February 10 and was given permission to speak with the former premier, who claimed that a surgical operation on January 24 had left his right eye with only 15% vision.
When Imran was evaluated by a medical team on February 15, they found that, without glasses, his eyesight was only 6/24 in his right eye and 6/9 in his left, but that, with corrective lenses, it improved to 6/9 and 6/6. The report was rejected by Imran’s family and TTAP, who reiterated that frequent, private access to his health must be granted to his personal doctors and family members.
In order to justify their sit-in, TTAP claimed that the government had been careless and opaque about Imran Khan’s medical care.


