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'Imran Khan is fine, Asim Munir mentally torturing him': Sister Uzma Khanum after meeting him in jail

  • Uzma meets Imran over a month of denied family access in Rawalpindi's Adiala Jail
  • 'Imran Khan is fine, Asim Munir mentally torturing him': Sister Uzma Khanum after meeting Imran Khan
  • Protests force jail visit amid death rumors, PTI demands full family access now

02 Dec 2025

'Imran Khan is fine, Asim Munir mentally torturing him': Sister Uzma Khanum after meeting him in jail

'Imran Khan is fine, Asim Munir mentally torturing him': Sister Uzma Khanum says after meeting Imran Khan. In the shadow of viral death rumors that had PTI supporters marching and family hearts breaking, Uzma Khanum finally stepped through the iron gates of Rawalpindi's Adiala Jail today marking a rare and emotional reunion with her brother, former Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan. The 72-year-old cricket icon, behind bars since August 2023 on what his party calls trumped-up charges, had been cut off from family for over a month—845 days total in custody, with the last six weeks in alleged solitary confinement that sparked wild online speculation of assassination or worse. Uzma, a doctor and one of Imran's three sisters, arrived escorted by tight security, her face etched with worry as she passed chanting crowds outside.

This wasn't just a visit; it was a crack in the fortress of restrictions, forced open by relentless protests and court pleas, offering a glimmer of proof that Imran is alive and holding on amid the political storm.The path to this meeting was paved with tension and defiance. PTI workers, led by Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Chief Minister Sohail Afridi, had been staging sit-ins outside the jail and Islamabad High Court for days, demanding transparency after Imran's son Kasim publicly begged for a simple photo or video of his father. Section 144 bans on gatherings couldn't stop dozens from showing up with Uzma, turning the afternoon into a powder keg of slogans and police lines.

Inside, the brief encounter unfolded under strict rules—no phones, no notes, just guarded words between siblings who hadn't connected since late October. PTI hailed it as a "first step" toward full access, slamming the curbs as army-orchestrated isolation to silence their leader. For the family scattered across borders, it was a desperate lifeline after weeks of silence that echoed like a death knell. As Uzma emerged, the crowds erupted in cheers, but the victory felt fragile—government hints at more meetings if protests stay calm, shadowed by warnings. This incident underscores Pakistan's raw power plays, where one denied visit can ignite nationwide fury. For Imran's supporters, it's fuel for the fight ahead of elections; for his kin, it's a quiet reminder that even in isolation, family ties bend but don't break. With the army's shadow looming large, Uzma's footsteps into Adiala might just echo as the start of a louder call for freedom.

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