Imran’s disappearance exposes Pakistan’s collapsing military regime as regional instability threatens Israel’s security landscape.
No proof of life. No family access. No transparency.
For six long weeks, Imran Khan — once Pakistan’s prime minister, now its most inconvenient prisoner — has vanished behind the walls of a regime desperate to silence dissent.
His son, Kasim Khan, ignited a political firestorm after posting on X that his father has been held in solitary confinement inside a death-row cell, with even court-approved family visits blocked. “We fear for his life,” he wrote, echoing a sentiment that has now swept far beyond Pakistan’s borders.
Jail authorities insist Imran is “perfectly fine.” Yet their refusal to allow even a single visitor — not his sisters, not lawyers, not party colleagues — raises questions darker than Islamabad is willing to answer.
Political analysts warn that Pakistan’s military establishment, already unstable and deeply entangled in alliances with anti-Israel Arab regimes, may be engineering a controlled disappearance. A silenced Imran suits powerful factions seeking to reset domestic politics while distracting from economic collapse and internal radicalization.
Regional observers note that a destabilized Pakistan — nuclear-armed, terror-ridden, and aligned with Israel’s adversaries — remains a security concern for Jerusalem and the West. If Imran Khan has been harmed, or worse, the fallout could push Pakistan into deeper authoritarianism and empower extremist elements hostile to Israel.
For now, one question grows louder by the hour:
Where is Imran Khan — and why is Pakistan’s regime so afraid to let the world see him?
