Imran Khan, former Prime Minister of Pakistan, is in jail primarily because of multiple corruption and related criminal cases in which he has been convicted, most notably the Al‑Qadir Trust (also linked to Toshakhana/state gifts) corruption case, along with earlier convictions over state gifts, alleged leaking of official secrets, and an unlawful marriage case. His supporters, however, insist these are politically motivated charges aimed at blocking him from returning to power.

Quick Scoop: Why He’s In Jail

  • Imran Khan was removed as prime minister in April 2022 via a no‑confidence vote, after which a wave of cases was filed against him.
  • In August 2023 he was arrested and jailed following conviction in a corruption case related to state gifts (often referred to as a Toshakhana case).
  • Since then, he has received several convictions, including:
    • Corruption and misuse of state gifts
    • Alleged leaking of classified information under Pakistan’s Official Secrets Act (the ā€œcipherā€ case)
    • A case involving violation of marriage laws
      These brought sentences of around 10, 14, and 7 years, ordered to run concurrently, so in practice he serves the longest of them.

Key Case: Al‑Qadir Trust / Corruption

  • A major case centers on the Al‑Qadir Trust, where anti‑graft authorities allege Khan and his wife Bushra Bibi allowed a property tycoon to launder more than 200 million dollars’ worth of assets in exchange for land and other benefits to their trust and for a residence in Lahore.
  • Authorities say this deal caused a substantial loss to Pakistan’s treasury because money recovered abroad and returned to Pakistan was allegedly diverted in a non‑transparent arrangement.

Why He’s Still Behind Bars

  • Even when one sentence is suspended or overturned, new convictions or ongoing trials in other cases have kept Khan in prison, with legal experts warning that overlapping cases can keep him incarcerated for years while appeals drag on.
  • Some reports note that, unless higher courts quickly overturn the main corruption conviction or there is a wider political deal, he is likely to remain in jail well into 2026 and possibly beyond.

Political vs Legal Viewpoints

  • Khan and his party, Pakistan Tehreek‑e‑Insaf (PTI), say he is a victim of a ā€œpolitical witch‑huntā€ and that the dozens of cases are designed to exclude him from politics and negotiations with the current government.
  • The government and anti‑corruption officials insist the cases show serious misuse of office, illegal retention and sale of state gifts, and irregular financial dealings, and they frame the prosecutions as part of accountability efforts.

Forum / Trending Context

  • Since 2023, ā€œImran Khan jailā€ and ā€œImran Khan political prisonerā€ have remained trending topics on South Asian and global social media, with debates over whether he is a corrupt leader finally facing justice or a popular politician being sidelined by the establishment.
  • Long legal timelines, back‑and‑forth court decisions, and periodic rumors about his health and potential deals keep the question ā€œimran khan why is he in jailā€ in constant circulation as a major political and forum discussion topic.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.