ISLAMABAD: A local court in the federal capital on Wednesday remanded Dr. Shahbaz Gill, a senior Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) leader and former prime minister Imran Khan’s chief of staff, in police custody for two days after a case was registered against him on charges of sedition and inciting people against state institutions.
Gill was arrested on Tuesday afternoon, a day after he made a controversial comment in a talk show aired by a private news channel, asking army officers not to follow orders of their top command if they were “against the sentiments of the masses.”
The country’s national media regulator described the statement as “seditious” while issuing a show-cause notice to the channel, ARY News, for airing the “illegal” content.
The Karachi police also arrested the channel’s head of news, Ammad Yousaf, from his residence after a case was filed against the channel’s chief executive officer Salman Iqbal, anchor Arshad Sharif, analyst and Islamabad bureau chief Khawar Ghumman and producer Adil Raja.
“My statement contains nothing of which I should be ashamed,” Gill told the media during his court appearance. “This is the statement of a patriot. I haven’t tried to incite anyone. I only talked about officers in bureaucracy who are doing wrong.”
Gill’s lawyer, Faisal Hussain, opposed the prosecution’s appeal for the physical remand, but the court handed him over to the police for two days while rejecting the plea.
The PTI leader will now be produced in the court on Friday again.
“We will be going to the high court to get the case quashed,” Hussain told reporters.
According to ARY News management, the channel was taken off air across the country hours after Gill’s segment was broadcast.
The channel reported that police officials along with plain-clothed men forcibly entered Yousaf’s Karachi residence in the early hours of Wednesday. It added that the raiding team diverted the CCTV cameras of his house and jumped in from the top of the main entrance.
A case registered in Pakistan’s southern Karachi port city said the ARY News show and Gill’s statement aimed at “creating rift, hate and revolt within the armed forces.”
“They are threatening other government officers as well from carrying out their official work,” the complaint added. “This is a premeditated conspiracy through which hatred is created among the armed forces and other government departments.”
Khan’s PTI party has condemned the suspension of ARY transmission along with the arrest of the channel’s head of news.
“First, a crackdown was carried out against politicians, and now force is used to gag the media,” the party secretary general, Asad Umar, said in a statement.
“Who is next,” he asked. “Will the next attack be on judiciary?”