IMRAN KHAN

                Imran Khan 



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


Imran Ahmed Khan Niazi HI PP (Urdu: عمران احمد خان نیازی‎, conceived 5 October 1952) is the 22nd[n 1] and current Prime Minister of Pakistan. He is likewise the administrator of the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI). Prior to entering governmental issues, Khan was a global cricketer and commander of the Pakistan public cricket crew, which he prompted triumph in the 1992 Cricket World Cup. He was chancellor of the University of Bradford in the United Kingdom from 2005 to 2014.[16][17] 


Imran Khan 


Hello there PP 


عمران خان 


- UNGA (48784380531) (cropped).jpg 


Khan in 2019 


22nd Prime Minister of Pakistan 


Occupant 


Accepted office 


18 August 2018 


President 


Mamnoon Hussain 


Arif Alvi 


Gone before by 


Nasirul Mulk (Caretaker) 


Administrator of the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf 


Officeholder 


Expected office 


25 April 1996 


Representative 


Shah Mehmood Qureshi 


Gone before by 


Position set up 


Individual from the National Assembly 


Officeholder 


Expected office 


13 August 2018 


Gone before by 


Obaidullah Shadikhel 


Voting public 


NA-95 (Mianwali-I) 


Greater part 


113,523 (44.89%) 


In office 


19 June 2013 – 31 May 2018 


Gone before by 


Hanif Abbasi 


Prevailed by 


Sheik Rashid Shafique 


Body electorate 


NA-56 (Rawalpindi-VII) 


Greater part 


13,268 (8.28%) 


In office 


10 October 2002 – 3 November 2007 


Gone before by 


Body electorate set up 


Prevailed by 


Nawabzada Malik Amad Khan 


Body electorate 


NA-71 (Mianwali-I) 


Greater part 


6,204 (4.49%) 


Chancellor of the University of Bradford 


In office 


7 December 2005 – 7 December 2014 


Gone before by 


The Baroness Lockwood 


Prevailed by 


Kate Swann 


Individual subtleties 


Conceived 


Imran Ahmed Khan Niazi 


5 October 1952 (age 68) 


Lahore, Punjab, Pakistan 


Ideological group 


Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf 


Spouse(s) 


Jemima Goldsmith 


​ 


​(m. 1995; div. 2004)​ 


Reham Khan 


​ 


​(m. 2015; div. 2015)​ 


Bushra Bibi ​(m. 2018)​ 


Homegrown accomplice 


Emma Sergeant (1982–1986)[1] 


Sita White (1987–1991)[2][3] 


Kristiane Backer (1992–1994)[4] 


Kids 



Guardians 


Ikramullah Khan Niazi (father) 


Shaukat Khanum (mother) 


Home 


Leader Enclave (official) 


Bani Gala Mansion (individual) 


Training 


College of Oxford (BA) 


Total assets 


₨1.08 billion (US$6.7 million)[5] 


Grants 


Hilal-e-Imtiaz (1992) 



Pride of Performance (1983) King Hamad Order of the Renaissance (2019) Wetherall Award (1980) Inaugural Silver Jubilee grant (2008) 


Mark 


Site 


Official site 


Nickname(s) 


Kaptaan,[6][7] Lion of Pakistan [8][9] 


Individual data 


Tallness 


1.88 m (6 ft 2 in)[10] 


Batting 


Right-gave batsman 


Bowling 


Right-arm quick 


Job 


All-rounder 


Global data 


Public side 


Pakistan (1971-1992) 


Test debut (cap 88) 


3 June 1971 v England 


Last Test 


2 January 1992 v Sri Lanka 


ODI debut (cap 175) 


31 August 1974 v England 


Last ODI 


25 March 1992 v England 


Vocation 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


10 wickets in match 6 0 13


Best bowling 8/58 6/14 8/34 6/14 


Gets/stumpings 28/ – 36/ – 117/ – 84/ – 


Source: ESPNCricinfo, 5 November 2014 


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


Khan was brought into the world to a Pashtun family in Lahore in 1952,[18] and moved on from Keble College, Oxford in 1975. He started his global cricket profession at age 18, in a 1971 Test series against England.[18] Khan played until 1992, filled in as the group's skipper irregularly somewhere in the range of 1982 and 1992,[19] and won the Cricket World Cup, in what is Pakistan's solitary triumph in the competition.[20] Considered one of cricket's most noteworthy ever all-rounders, Khan enlisted 3,807 runs and stepped through 362 wickets in Examination cricket[21] and was drafted into the ICC Cricket Hall of Fame.[19] 



In 1991, he dispatched a raising money mission to set up a malignant growth clinic in memory of his mom. He raised $25 million to set up a medical clinic in Lahore in 1994, and set up a second medical clinic in Peshawar in 2015.[22] Khan then, at that point proceeded with his magnanimous endeavors, growing the Shaukat Khanum Memorial Cancer Hospital to likewise incorporate an exploration community, and established Namal College in 2008.[23][24] Khan additionally filled in as the chancellor of the University of Bradford somewhere in the range of 2005 and 2014, and was the beneficiary of a privileged association by the Royal College of Physicians in 2012.[25][26] 


Khan established the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) in 1996, and fills in as the party's chairman.[27] By winning a seat in the National Assembly in 2002, he filled in as a resistance part from Mianwali until 2007. PTI boycotted the 2008 general political decision. In the ensuing political decision PTI turned into the second-biggest party by famous vote.[28][29] In territorial legislative issues, PTI drove an alliance government in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa from 2013,[30] with Khan designating this initiative to Mahmood Khan in the wake of being chosen as Prime Minister in 2018.[31] 


As Prime Minister, Khan tended to an equilibrium of installments emergency with a bailout from the International Monetary Fund.[32] He likewise managed a contracting current record deficit[33][34] and restricted guard spending to diminish the financial deficit.[35][36] Eventually, Pakistan's economy started to recuperate under Khan's premiership.[37] Khan additionally dispatched an enemy of debasement crusade, however was scrutinized by political rivals for claimed targeting.[38] In other homegrown approach, Khan pushed for an increment in sustainable power production[39] and ended non-sustainable power sources from future construction[40] pursuing an intend to make Pakistan for the most part inexhaustible by 2030.[41] He additionally started reforestation[42] and extension of public parks.[43] He authorized arrangement which expanded assessment collection[44][45] and investment.[46] Khan's administration additionally established changes to education[47] and healthcare[48][49] on a public and local level individually. Further changes were made to Pakistan's social wellbeing net.[50][51] In international strategy, he managed line engagements against India, upheld the Afghan harmony process,[52] and reinforced relations with China, Russia[53] and the United States.[54] 


Early life and family 



Additional data: Family of Imran Khan 


Khan was brought into the world in Lahore on 5 October 1952. A few reports recommend he was brought into the world on 25 November 1952.[55][56][57][58] It was accounted for that 25 November was wrongly referenced by Pakistan Cricket Board authorities on his passport.[59] He is the lone child of Ikramullah Khan Niazi, a structural designer, and his significant other Shaukat Khanum, and has four sisters.[60] Long got comfortable Mianwali in northwestern Punjab, his fatherly family are of Pashtun nationality and have a place with the Niazi tribe,[61][62] and one of his predecessors, Haibat Khan Niazi, in the sixteenth century, "was one of Sher Shah Suri's driving commanders, just as being the legislative leader of Punjab."[63] Like his dad, Khan's mom was an ethnic Pashtun, who had a place with the Burki clan and whose precursors had been gotten comfortable the Jalandhar area of Punjab for quite a long time. Following the making of Pakistan, she moved to Lahore with the remainder of Khan's maternal relatives.[64] Khan's maternal family has created various cricketers, including the individuals who have addressed Pakistan,[60], for example, his cousins Javed Burki and Majid Khan.[61] Maternally, Khan is additionally a relative of the Sufi hero writer and innovator of the Pashto letters in order, Pir Roshan, who hailed from his maternal family's genealogical Kaniguram town situated in South Waziristan in the ancestral spaces of northwest Pakistan.[65] His maternal family was situated in Basti Danishmanda, Jalandhar, India for around 600 years.[66][67] 


A calm and modest kid in his childhood, Khan grew up with his sisters in moderately rich, upper working class circumstances[68] and got special schooling. He was instructed at the Aitchison College and Cathedral School in Lahore,[69][70] and afterward the Royal Grammar School Worcester in England, where he dominated at cricket. In 1972, he took a crack at Keble College, Oxford where he considered Philosophy, Politics and Economics, graduating in 1975.[71] 


Cricket profession 



Khan made his top of the line cricket debut at 16 years old in Lahore. By the beginning of the 1970s, he was playing for his host groups of Lahore A (1969–70), Lahore B (1969–70), Lahore Greens (1970–71) and, in the end, Lahore (1970–71).[72] Khan was important for the University of Oxford's Blues Cricket crew during the 1973–1975 seasons.[71] 


As a bowler, Khan at first bowled with a moderately chest-on activity, at medium-pace.[73] However he endeavored to rebuild his activity to a more traditional sort, and to fortify his body, to empower quick bowling.[74][75] 


He played English area cricket from 1971 to 1976 at Worcestershire. During this decade, different groups addressed by Khan included Dawood Industries (1975–1976) and Pakistan International Airlines (1975–1976 to 1980–1981). From 1983 to 1988, he played for Sussex.[21] 



Khan made his Test cricket debut against England in June 1971 at Edgbaston.[76] Three years after the fact, in August 1974, he appeared in the One Day International (ODI) match, indeed playing against England at Trent Bridge for the Prudential Trophy.[76] After moving on from Oxford and completing his residency at Worcestershire, he got back to Pakistan in 1976 and got an extremely durable spot in his local public group beginning from the 1976–1977 season, during which they confronted New Zealand and Australia.[72] Following the Australian series, he visited the West Indies, where he met Tony Greig, who marked him up for Kerry Packer's World Series Cricket.

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