'Will be brilliant to see him...': Pakistan ex-PM Imran Khan applies to be Oxford chancellor
Aug. 19, 2024, 3:15 p.m.
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Pakistan’s jailed former prime minister Imran Khan has applied to become the next chancellor of Britain’s prestigious University of Oxford, his party said.
Khan, who served as prime minister from 2018 to 2022, has recently completed a year in prison. He faces multiple charges, ranging from corruption to inciting violence, which he claims are politically motivated and aimed at preventing him from regaining power.
“Imran Khan had given instructions that he would like to submit his application and now the application scrutiny will take place,” Sayed Zulfikar Bukhari, the London-based spokesman for Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party, told AFP.
Advertisement “It’s a ceremonial post but one with utmost prestige and importance and Imran Khan, being one of the larger or more popular names coming out of Oxford, it would be brilliant to see him as chancellor,” he said.
Chris Patten, a prominent Conservative figure and the last British governor of Hong Kong, announced his resignation as Oxford's chancellor in February.
The list of candidates for the 10-year term will not be made public until October, according to the university’s website, with voting taking place at the end of the month.
Khan obtained his degree from Oxford in 1975 after completing studies in philosophy, politics, and economics.
He led a playboy lifestyle during his career as one of Pakistan’s greatest cricket players, regularly gracing the pages of Britain’s gossip magazines.
He was married three times, including to British socialite and filmmaker Jemima Goldsmith, and later focused on charitable work and politics.
He faced a backlash from women’s rights groups while prime minister for linking Pakistan’s high rates of sexual violence to the clothes that women wear.
Khan was ousted in 2022 and then launched a comeback campaign in which he criticised Pakistan’s powerful military, whose leading generals had once backed him, and drew massive crowds onto the nation’s streets.
“If he does become the chancellor, he would be the first of Asian descent. It wouldn’t be something only for Pakistan, but it would be a great achievement for all of Asia and the rest of the world,” Bukhari said.
Other notable candidates and Oxford alumni, according to British media reports, include former foreign secretary William Hague and former EU trade commissioner Peter Mandelson.