Imran khan







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This article is about the lawmaker and previous cricketer. For others with a similar name, see Imran Khan (disambiguation).

Imran Khan

Hey PP

عمران خان


Khan in Walk 2023

22nd Top state leader of Pakistan

In office

18 August 2018 - 10 April 2022

President

Mamnoon Hussain

Arif Alvi

Gone before by Nasirul Mulk (overseer)

Succeeded by Shehbaz Sharif

Administrator of the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf

In office

25 April 1996 - 2 December 2023

Bad habit Chairman Shah Mahmood Qureshi

Gone before by Position laid out

Succeeded by Gohar Ali Khan

Individual from the Public Get together

In office

13 August 2018 - 21 October 2022

Gone before by Obaidullah Shadikhel

Constituency NA-95 Mianwali-I

Majority 113,523 (44.89%)

In office

19 June 2013 - 31 May 2018

Gone before by Hanif Abbasi

Succeeded by Sheikh Rashid Shafique

Constituency NA-56 Rawalpindi-VII

Majority 13,268 (8.28%)

In office

10 October 2002 - 3 November 2007

Gone before by Constituency laid out

Succeeded by Nawabzada Malik Amad Khan

Constituency NA-71 Mianwali-I

Majority 6,204 (4.49%)

Chancellor of the College of Bradford

In office

7 December 2005 - 7 December 2014

Gone before by Betty Lockwood

Succeeded by Kate Swann

Individual subtleties

Born Imran Ahmad Khan Niazi

5 October 1952 (age 71)

Lahore, West Punjab, Pakistan

(present-day Punjab, Pakistan)

Political party Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (starting around 1996)

Life partners

Jemima Goldsmith


 (m. 1995; div. 2004)

Reham Khan


 (m. 2015; div. 2015)

Bushra Bibi (m. 2018)

Children 2

Relatives Family of Imran Khan

Homes

Bani Function, Islamabad, Capital Domain

Zaman Park, Lahore, Punjab

Education Keble School, Oxford (BA)

Awards See list

Signature

Nickname Kaptaan (Chief)

Individual data

Height 6 ft 2 in (188 cm)[1]

Batting Right-gave

Bowling Right-arm quick

Role All-rounder

Worldwide data

Public side

Pakistan (1971-1992)

Test debut (cap 88) 3 June 1971 v Britain

Last Test 2 January 1992 v Sri Lanka

ODI debut (cap 175) 31 August 1974 v Britain

Last ODI 25 Walk 1992 v Britain

Profession insights

Competition Test ODI FC LA

Matches 88 175 382 425

Runs scored 3,807 3,709 17,771 10,100

Batting average 37.69 33.41 36.79 33.22

100s/50s 6/18 1/19 30/93 5/66

Top score 136 102* 170 114*

Balls bowled 19,458 7,461 65,224 19,122

Wickets 362 182 1287 507

Bowling average 22.81 26.61 22.32 22.31

5 wickets in innings 23 1 70 6

10 wickets in match 6 0 13 0

Best bowling 8/58 6/14 8/34 6/14

Gets/stumpings 28/ - 36/ - 117/ - 84/ -

Decoration record

Men's Cricket

Addressing Pakistan

ICC Cricket World Cup

Winner 1992 Australia and New Zealand

Big showdown of Cricket

Sprinter up 1985 Australia

ACC Asia Cup

Sprinter up 1986 Sri Lanka

Austral-Asia Cup

Winner 1986 Joined Middle Easterner Emirates

Winner 1990 Joined Middle Easterner Emirates

Source: ESPNcricinfo, 5 November 2014


This article contains Urdu text. Without appropriate delivering support, you might see unjoined letters running left to right or different images rather than Urdu script.


This article is essential for

a series about

Imran Khan

Early lifeCricket careerElectoral history

22nd State head of Pakistan

Prevalence

Vow of officeImran Khan ministryFirst 100 daysInternational tripsEhsaas ProgrammeKamyab Jawan ProgramPlant for PakistanCOVID-19 pandemicNo-certainty movement Sacred crisisLettergate

Post-prevalence

Legitimate issues Al-Qadir Trust caseToshakhana reference caseTyrian White case

Fights 2022-2023 Pakistan political unrest2022 Azadi Walk I2022 Azadi Walk II2023 Pakistani fights May 9 riotsAssassination attemptArrest

Races

1997200220132018

Legislative issues

Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf2014 Tidal wave MarchInqilab MarchIhtisab Walk

Related

FamilyAwards and honoursPakistan: An Individual HistoryInternational cricket five-wicket haulsPetsShaukat Khanum Dedication Malignant growth HospitalNamal School


vte

Imran Ahmed Khan Niazi (Urdu: عمران خان , articulated [ɪmɾaːn ɛɦməd xaːn nɪjaːziː]; conceived 5 October 1952) is a Pakistani lawmaker and previous cricketer who filled in as the 22nd state head of Pakistan from August 2018 until April 2022. He is the pioneer and previous director of the ideological group Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) from 1996 to 2023. He was the chief of the Pakistan public cricket crew all through the 1980s and mid 90s.


Brought into the world in Lahore, Khan moved on from Keble School, Oxford. He started his global cricket vocation in a 1971 Test series against Britain. Khan played until 1992, filled in as the group's chief discontinuously somewhere in the range of 1982 and 1992, and won the 1992 Cricket World Cup, Pakistan's just triumph in the opposition. Considered quite possibly of cricket's most prominent all-rounder, Khan was subsequently enlisted into the ICC Cricket Corridor of Notoriety. Establishing the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) in 1996, Khan won a seat in the Public Get together in the 2002 general political race, filling in as a resistance part from Mianwali until 2007. PTI boycotted the 2008 general political decision and turned into the second-biggest party by famous vote in the 2013 general political decision. In the 2018 general political race, running on a libertarian stage, PTI turned into the biggest party in the Public Get together, and framed an alliance government with free movers with Khan as state leader.


As top state leader, Khan tended to an equilibrium of installments emergency with bailouts from the IMF. He managed a contracting current record shortfall, and restricted protection spending to reduce the financial deficiency, prompting some broad monetary development. He established arrangements that expanded assessment assortment and speculation. His administration focused on a sustainable power change, sent off Ehsaas Program and the Plant for Pakistan drive, and extended the safeguarded areas of Pakistan. He managed the Coronavirus pandemic, which caused monetary unrest and rising expansion in the nation, undermining his political position.


In mid 2022, in what became known as Lettergate, Khan affirmed that the US supported his expulsion from office. In April, during the resulting sacred emergency, Khan turned into the principal Pakistani state head to be eliminated from office through a no-certainty movement. In August, he was charged under enemy of dread regulations in the wake of blaming the police and legal executive for keeping and tormenting an assistant. In October, Khan was excluded by the Political decision Commission of Pakistan from getting down to business for the ongoing term of the Public Gathering of Pakistan, in regards to the Toshakhana reference case. In November, he endure a death endeavor during a political convention in Wazirabad, Punjab.


On 9 May 2023, Khan was captured on debasement allegations at the Islamabad High Court by paramilitary soldiers who crushed their direction into the town hall. Fights broke out all through Pakistan, bringing about the captures of thousands of Khan's allies alongside army bases being stripped. After his delivery, he faulted the Head of Armed force Staff Asim Munir for his capture. He was condemned to a three-year prison term on 5 August 2023 subsequent to being viewed as at fault for abusing his prevalence to trade presents in state ownership that were gotten during discretionary visits abroad.[2][3] On 29 August 2023, a Pakistani requests court suspended Khan's three-year jail term and conceded him bail,[4][5][6] yet he remained detained regarding the Lettergate conciliatory code, for which he was blamed for spilling state mysteries and disregarding the Authority Insider facts Act.[7][8] On 30 January 2024, an extraordinary court condemned Khan to 10 years in jail in the wake of viewing him to be blameworthy of those charges.[9][10]


Early life and family

Additional data: Group of Imran Khan

Khan was brought into the world in Lahore on 5 October 1952.[11] Prior, a few reports recommend he was brought into the world on 25 November 1952.[12][13][14][15] It was accounted for that 5 October was wrongly referenced by Pakistan Cricket Board authorities on his passport.[16] He is the main child of Ikramullah Khan Niazi, a structural specialist, and his significant other Shaukat Khanum, and has four sisters.[17] Long got comfortable Mianwali in northwestern Punjab, his fatherly family are of Pashtun plunge and have a place with the Niazi tribe,[18][19] and one of his progenitors, Haibat Khan Niazi, in the sixteenth 100 years, "was one of Sher Shah Suri's driving commanders, as well just like the legislative leader of Punjab."[20] [21] Khan's maternal family has created various cricketers, including the people who have addressed Pakistan,[17], for example, his cousins Javed Burki and Majid Khan.[18] Maternally, Khan is likewise a relative of the Sufi fighter writer and creator of the Pashto letters in order, Pir Roshan, who hailed from his maternal family's genealogical Kaniguram town situated in South Waziristan in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.[22] His maternal family was situated in Basti Danishmanda, Jalandhar in Punjab, India for around 600 years, and moved to Lahore after the freedom of Pakistan.[23][24]


A calm and bashful kid in his childhood, Khan grew up with his sisters in generally wealthy, upper working class circumstances[25] and got special training. He was taught at the Aitchison School and Basilica School in Lahore,[26][27] and afterward the Regal Punctuation School Worcester in Britain, where he succeeded at cricket. In 1972, he signed up for Keble School, Oxford where he concentrated on way of thinking, governmental issues and financial matters, graduating in 1975.[28] A lover for school cricket at Keble, Paul Hayes, was instrumental in getting the confirmation of Khan, after he had been turned somewhere near Cambridge.[29]


Individual life

Khan had various connections during his single guy life.[30] He was then known as a libertine unhitched male and a playboy who was dynamic on the London club circuit.[30][31][32] Numerous sweethearts are obscure and were classified "strange blondies" by English paper The Times.[33] A portion of the ladies with whom he has been related incorporate Zeenat Aman,[34] Emma Sergeant, Susie Murray-Philipson, Sita W

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