Imran Khan married Reham Khan in January this year in a
simple ceremony at his Islamabad home.
Pakistani opposition leader and former playboy cricketer
Imran Khan is to divorce for a second time, ending his marriage to a TV
journalist just ten months after they wed, his wife said Friday.
Imran Khan, 62, married 42-year-old Reham Khan, a former BBC
weather host and a divorced mother of three, in January this year in a simple
ceremony at his Islamabad home.
"We have decided to part ways and file for
divorce," Reham Khan said in a brief statement on her Twitter account
Friday.
"Yes I can confirm their divorce," Naeem ul Haque,
Imran Khan's spokesman told AFP.
"They mutually agreed to divorce today. It's a painful
and personal matter, so I won't be able to comment more or state any reason for
it," Haque said.
Loved by millions across the cricket-obsessed nation for
winning Pakistan its only World Cup in 1992, Khan's sporting prowess and rugged
good looks also brought him international celebrity in a country lacking
glamour.
He was considered his country's most eligible man until he
suddenly announced his plans to marry shortly after launching a movement to
topple the government in August 2014, which he called off in December after a
Taleban attack on a school that killed 150 people.
Reham Khan, host of a local TV talk show, was widely
criticised after she appeared at public meetings of Imran Khan's Pakistan
Tehreek-i-Insaaf (PTI) party, with opponents accusing her of seeking to boost
her own profile through her husband's fame.
She found particularly harsh reception in northwest Khyber
Pakhtunkhwa province, governed by PTI.
She also sparked controversy after it emerged that she had
not actually attended a college where she claimed to be a student on her
website.
There had been reports Imran Khan's family was unhappy with
his choice of bride.
Imran Khan is the father of two sons from his previous
marriage to British socialite Jemima Khan (nee Goldsmith).
Born in 1952 in Lahore into a comfortable family with
origins in the Pashtun northwest, he was educated at Aitchison College, the
Eton of Pakistan, boarding school in England, and then Oxford University.
He became one of the world's greatest ever all-rounders - a
fearsome fast bowler and dangerous batsman - whose finest hour came at the 1992
World Cup, where at the age of 39 he led an inexperienced team to the title.
Off the pitch, he had a string of socialite girlfriends and
frequented exclusive nightclubs in London until he married Jemima Goldsmith,
the daughter of the French-British tycoon James, in 1995.
She converted to Islam and the couple moved in with his
family in Lahore.
They divorced in 2004, allegedly over the difficulties
Jemima faced in Pakistan, where she was hounded for her family's Jewish
ancestry, and his obsession with politics.
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