Pakistani police and supporters of Imran Khan fought pitched battles on Tuesday outside the former prime minister's home in the eastern city of Lahore, injuring several on both sides, ahead of his possible arrest, a government spokesperson and witnesses said.
The police charged the supporters with batons and lobbed teargas shells.
A few hundred Khan supporters gathered outside his house after a police team arrived from Islamabad to arrest him on a court order, government spokesperson Amir Mir told Reuters.
Khan's Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) workers started the violence, which injured several police officials, Mir said, adding, "If Khan ensures his presence in the court, it will be good, otherwise the law will take its course."
Khan called on his supporters to stand up for the supremacy of law and fight for true independence.
"Police have come to arrest and send me to jail," he said in a video-recorded statement posted on his Twitter handle.
"If something happens to me or I’m sent to jail, or they kill me, you've to prove that this nation will continue to struggle even without Imran Khan."
Mir said the government has called out paramilitary forces to control the situation.
Several of Khan's supporters were injured when the police resorted to teargas shelling, witnesses said.
Similar clashes took place last week.
"We have come here just for the compliance of the court order," deputy inspector-general of police Syed Shahzad Nadeem told reporters.
The workers started pelting the police with stones and bricks, and in response police directed a water cannon at them and in some cases, baton charged them, he said.
Live TV footage showed the supporters also using slingshots and attacking the police with bricks and sticks.
"Our understanding is that the police can't arrest Imran Khan because he has secured a protective bail from a high court," his aide Shah Mehmood Qureshi told reporters.
The court in Islamabad had issued the arrest warrant in a case against Khan for unlawfully selling state gifts while in power from 2018 to 2022, his aide Fawad Chaudhry told Reuters.
The former premier has been embroiled in several court cases since his ousting early last year in a parliament vote of confidence.
He has been demanding snap polls in protest rallies across the country, a move his successor Shehbaz Sharif has rejected, saying the elections would be held as scheduled later this year.
Khan was also shot and wounded in one of these rallies.
- Reuters