A Pakistan court ordered police on Wednesday to suspend an operation to arrest former Prime Minister Imran Khan, bringing a halt to pitched battles in which police baton-charged supporters of the former cricketer and fired water cannon and tear gas.
Security forces withdrew from around his home in the eastern city of Lahore, easing political instability in the nuclear-armed nation which is struggling with an economic crisis and awaiting an International Monetary Fund bailout.
The Lahore high court ordered police to postpone their efforts to arrest Khan until Thursday 10am, reports Pakistani media the Dawn.
The operation to arrest Khan came after a lower court in the capital Islamabad issued a warrant against him for defying orders to present himself in court over charges that he unlawfully sold state gifts given to him by foreign dignitaries when he was prime minister from 2018 to 2022. The case is called Toshakhana reference case.
Imran is accused of earning $36 million from selling three watches gifted to him. He has denied wrongdoing.
In a tweet, Khan said he had signed a "surety bond" that would guarantee his appearance in the court by a March 18 deadline, and senior aide Fawad Chaudhry said Khan`s party, the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf, had asked the court to stop the police action.