Former Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan underwent specialized eye treatment at Islamabad’s Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences (PIMS) on Tuesday, February 24, 2026, while remaining imprisoned on corruption charges. The hospital confirmed Khan received his second dose of eye injections and described his condition as “clinically stable.” This development occurs amidst growing international concern regarding the 73-year-old former cricket star’s deteriorating eyesight, with his legal team reporting he has lost approximately 85% of vision in his right eye.
Khan’s press adviser, Sayed Zulfiqar Bukhari, immediately raised objections regarding medical access, stating authorities continued to deny visitation rights to Khan’s personal physician and family members. These concerns were amplified last week when more than a dozen international cricket captains jointly appealed to the Pakistani government to ensure adequate medical treatment for the former premier.
The political context remains deeply contentious. Khan, who served as prime minister from 2018 until his removal via no-confidence vote in 2022, has been incarcerated since 2023. He and his wife were subsequently sentenced to 17 years imprisonment on corruption allegations that both vehemently deny. Khan’s political party, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf, maintains all legal proceedings represent politically motivated persecution orchestrated by the current administration and Pakistan’s powerful military establishment.
Khan’s son, Kasim Khan, publicly accused authorities of “medical neglect” during his father’s confinement, asserting via social media platform X that “the responsibility lies squarely with the regime in power, the Army Chief and the puppets enabling this cruelty.” Khan’s initial arrest in May 2023 triggered widespread civil unrest throughout Pakistan, with demonstrations frequently turning violent and resulting in hundreds of arrests.
The former leader’s health crisis has transformed into both a medical and diplomatic issue, drawing attention from international sports figures and human rights observers who question prison conditions and judicial fairness in Pakistan’s ongoing political turmoil.
