Reham Khan meets President Erdogan for launching controversial book in Turkey?

LAHORE – A photo showing Reham Khan standing along Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan is circulating on social media with a claim that she has been trying to launch her controversial book in Turkey after facing obstacles in the United Kingdom.

It was also reported that Khan held a meeting with Erdogan at the Presidential complex to discuss the matter; however, it turns out the picture and news are fake.

According to a media outlet, it was a doctored image as in the real picture Reham Khan was standing along with Deputy Minister for EU Affairs Ali SAHIN. The picture was taken last month when the former wife of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) visited the Presidential Complex.

The rteurdu.com also dismissed reports regarding launching Khan’s autobiography in Turkey, saying content based on character assassination is banned in the country.

The book, titled ‘Reham Khan’, is under process and said to revolve around Reham’s marriage with PTI chief Imran Khan, which ended in a divorce mere 15 months later.

Some parts of the book were leaked online which irked several PTI leaders who took to Twitter to accuse her of being part of an “agenda” ahead of the upcoming general election.

On this issue, Reham Khan has been served a legal notice by her first husband, a cricket legend, a British businessman, and a PTI official over the contents of her upcoming book.

https://en.dailypakistan.com.pk/pakistan/alleged-leaked-excerpts-from-reham-khans-book-have-things-more-shocking-than-we-ever-imagined/

The BBC girl tell-all autobiography reportedly includes details of her interactions with various celebrities and her marriage with Imran. Some of those details apparently crossed a line for businessman Zulfikar Bukhari, Reham’s first husband Ijaz Rehman, cricketer Wasim Akram, and PTI International Media Coordinator Anila Khawaja.

Recently, Imran Khan’s former wife Jemima Goldsmith on Wednesday vowed to sue Reham Khan if her book was published in the United Kingdom.

Jemima wrote on Twitter that she had been assured that Reham’s book was “too libellous to be published in the UK”.

“I will be suing for defamation & breach of privacy on behalf of my (then) 16-year-old son and in relation to the moronic, re-hashed Zionist conspiracy theories,” she said in her tweet.

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