ISLAMABAD - The Islamabad High Court (IHC) on Friday dismissed previous head of the state Imran Khan's requests for bail and the abrogation of the Principal Data Report (FIR) in the code case. Play Video IHC Boss Equity Aamer Farooq conveyed the court's choice after the contentions from the two sides were closed. During the past hearing, Khan's insight, Sardar Latif Khosa, contended that a FIR couldn't be enlisted against his client, as the previous state head's government bureau had declassified the code. Khosa further expressed that the ex-head was safeguarded by insusceptibility under Article 248 of the Constitution, which covers acts performed or suspected to be finished by the president, lead representative, state head, government serve, priest of state, boss clergyman, and common pastor. During the conference, one more advice for Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) administrator, Lawyer Salman Safdar, fought that Part 5 of the Authority Mysteries Act didn't mak
IHC rejects Imran Khan's supplications looking for bail, dropping of FIR in figure case Web Work area
ISLAMABAD - The Islamabad High Court (IHC) on Friday dismissed previous head of the state Imran Khan's requests for bail and the abrogation of the Principal Data Report (FIR) in the code case. Play Video IHC Boss Equity Aamer Farooq conveyed the court's choice after the contentions from the two sides were closed. During the past hearing, Khan's insight, Sardar Latif Khosa, contended that a FIR couldn't be enlisted against his client, as the previous state head's government bureau had declassified the code. Khosa further expressed that the ex-head was safeguarded by insusceptibility under Article 248 of the Constitution, which covers acts performed or suspected to be finished by the president, lead representative, state head, government serve, priest of state, boss clergyman, and common pastor. During the conference, one more advice for Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) administrator, Lawyer Salman Safdar, fought that Part 5 of the Authority Mysteries Act didn't mak