ISLAMABAD — Pakistan's imprisoned former Prime Minister Imran Khan is in good health after undergoing a medical procedure for an eye ailment at a government hospital, an official said Thursday.
Khan remains widely popular in Pakistan, and the government's acknowledgment of his hospital visit has raised concerns about his treatment and medical condition. Leaders and supporters of his party staged a sit-in outside the prison where he's being held, demanding that his doctors and family members be allowed to meet him.
The former premier was examined by a team of doctors at Rawalpindi's Adiala prison, where he's serving multiple prison sentences, before being taken to a government hospital on Saturday, where he underwent a 20-minute medical procedure with his consent.
''He is in good health,'' Information Minister Attaullah Tarar told the private Geo News television channel.
The comments came after Khan's opposition Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party spokesman Zulfikar Bukhari said earlier this week that the ex-prime minister was suffering from an eye condition and required ''immediate medical attention.''
Bukhari had called for Khan's personal physician to be granted access, warning on X that any further delay could result in ''irreversible harm.''
Khan's son, Kasim, wrote on X that his father has been diagnosed with central retinal vein occlusion, a dangerous blockage that can cause permanent vision loss.
''Yet authorities continue to block his treatment and deny him access to the doctors he trusts," he said.