Khan, who led Pakistan to victory in the 1992 cricket World Cup, went underground on Sunday, a day after police placed him under house arrest at his home in the eastern city of Lahore.
“If we don’t resist, it will take Pakistan on the path of destruction,” Khan said in the short video message broadcast on private Geo television. It did not say how it obtained the tape.
He was filmed against a plain grey background and was unshaven, speaking animatedly into the camera. “Imran is safe. From an unknown place he is leading the movement,” said retired Admiral Jawaid Iqbal, a spokesman for Khan’s Movement for Justice party.
“For his security, we are not disclosing his location. But he will soon be with the people of Pakistan. The situation in Pakistan is worse than Iraq at the moment,” Iqbal added.
“The police have ransacked my house and ill-treated my family members,” Imran said in a statement published by Britain’s Press Association news agency alongside comments from his ex-wife, the socialite Jemima Khan.