The Phnom Penh Post

Pakistan PM facing graft probe

- Khurram Shahzad

PAKISTAN’S top court ordered the prime minister be investigat­ed for corruption yesterday, in a highly anticipate­d decision that granted Nawaz Sharif a temporary reprieve as judges said there was insufficie­nt evidence to oust him from power.

Sharif and his children had been accused of graft in an ongoing case that had threatened to topple the prime minister and captivated Pakistan after the Panama Papers leak last year linked the family to offshore business.

The Supreme Court issued a split ruling calling for a joint investigat­ion team of anti-corruption officials along with the powerful Inter-Services Intelligen­ce (ISI) and Military Intelligen­ce to probe the claims.

“A thorough investigat­ion is required,” Justice Asif Saeed Khosa told the court, announcing the decision.

Two of the five judges went further, branding Sharif “dishonest” and saying he should be disqualifi­ed, but they were outnumbere­d.

The court has disqualifi­ed leaders before, holding former prime minister Yousuf Raza Gilani in contempt in 2012 for refusing to reopen corruption investigat­ions into then president Asif Ali Zardari, resulting in his disqualifi­cation.

“We respect the court verdict . . . It will be implemente­d in all its spirit,” government Railways Minister Khawaja Saad Rafique said after the verdict.

Around 1,500 police commandos and riot forces had been deployed around the court in Islamabad ahead of the highly anticipate­d decision. Dozens of batonwield­ing police were also seen along some roads leading into the capital.

The controvers­y could mean turmoil for Sharif’s governing party ahead of general elections that must be held by the end of next year, and as security and the economy improve in the militancyp­lagued country.

It erupted with the publicatio­n of 11.5 million secret documents from Panamanian law firm Mossack Fonseca last year which documented the offshore dealings of many of the world’s rich and powerful.

Among the global elite implicated were three of Sharif’s four children – his daughter and presumptiv­e political heir Maryam, and his sons Hasan and Hussein. At the heart of the matter is the legitimacy of the funds used by the Sharif family to purchase several high-end London properties via offshore companies.

Sharif’s ruling PML-N party insists the wealth was acquired legally through family businesses in Pakistan and the Gulf.

But lawyers for Pakistani cricketert­urned-politician Imran Khan, leader of the Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) party, argue the paper trail for the funds is nonexisten­t, and say the onus is on Sharif to prove his relatives did not engage in money laundering.

“The nation is expecting some sort of judgment that will change the course of history in Pakistan,” senior Supreme Court lawyer SM Zafar said prior to the ruling.

Regardless of the outcome, he said, the case was important for Pakistan, which ranked a lowly 116th out of 176 countries in a corruption index released by Transparen­cy Internatio­nal in January.

Political analyst Rasul Buksh Rais said: “It’s going to be [a] historic decision that will push Pakistan into electoral mood in either case.”

“Whether the court convicts him or not today it spells trouble and the prime minister will be weakened,” added Herald newspaper editor Badar Alam.

The controvers­y is the latest to hit Sharif, an industrial­ist serving his third term as prime minister after the first two were interrupte­d by interventi­ons from the country’s powerful military.

Late on Wednesday he detailed his party’s infrastruc­ture achievemen­ts in televised comments at the inaugurati­on of a power plant, without mentioning the looming verdict.

Pakistan, which marks its 70th anniversar­y of independen­ce later this year, has seen a surge in optimism in recent months.

Security has dramatical­ly improved in the last two years, overall confidence in the economy is growing, and the military, which has ruled the country for more than half its history, appears to have reached an accommodat­ion with Sharif’s civilian government.

 ?? AAMIR QURESHI/AFP ?? Supporters of the ruling party Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz celebrate after a Supreme Court verdict on the Panama Papers in Islamabad yesterday.
AAMIR QURESHI/AFP Supporters of the ruling party Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz celebrate after a Supreme Court verdict on the Panama Papers in Islamabad yesterday.

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