Waterloo Region Record

Pakistani court sentences ex-PM Sharif to 10 years in prison

- MUNIR AHMED

ISLAMABAD — A Pakistani anti-graft tribunal Friday announced a much-awaited ruling in a corruption case against former prime minister Nawaz Sharif, sentencing him to 10 years in prison over purchases of luxury apartments in London.

Sharif, who is in London with his ailing wife, was not in the courtroom for the verdict and was sentenced in absentia. It’s unlikely that Pakistan will seek his extraditio­n and the former prime minister hours after the ruling said he was returning home, without specifying a date.

“I am coming back to Pakistan,” he said at a news conference aired on Pakistani TV. “I am not afraid of jail.”

He said he would continue his struggle “for the supremacy of law and the constituti­on.”

Sharif said his wife was on a respirator at a London hospital and that he was waiting for her to regain consciousn­ess, so he could talk to her before returning home.

He asked Pakistanis to back his party’s candidates in the upcoming parliament elections and called Friday’s ruling against him “strange,” claiming none of his family members misappropr­iated government funds.

It was the latest blow to Sharif, just weeks ahead of the elections later this month, and the first verdict against the embattled former prime minister who has faced a string of trials since he was ousted from office by the Supreme Court last year for concealing assets abroad.

In Friday’s ruling, the court also sentenced Sharif’s daughter, Maryam Nawaz, to seven years in a case stemming from documents leaked from a Panama law firm while her husband, Mohammad Safdar, got sentenced to one year for giving false informatio­n to investigat­ors.

Judge Mohammad Bashir concluded in his written statement that Sharif and his family had failed to disclose the source of funds they used to purchase luxurious London properties and did not report the purchases to tax authoritie­s.

Bashir also fined Sharif eight million pounds, about US$10.6 million, while his daughter was fined two million pounds, about US$2.6 million. The judge also ordered the Sharif family’s London properties confiscate­d.

“This verdict shows that these Avenfield apartments were purchased using corruption money,” prosecutor Sardar Muzaffar Abbasi told reporters outside the court Friday, referring to London properties belonging to the Sharif family.

In a tweet, Sharif ’s daughter said her father was punished for resisting “unseen forces,” an apparent reference to the military that has ruled the country for half of its modern history since it gained independen­ce from Britain in 1947. She added that the people of Pakistan were standing by her father.

Nawaz is considered the political heir to her father and Friday’s ruling barred her from running for a seat in the parliament in the upcoming elections.

Sharif was forced into exile by President Pervez Musharraf, a former army general, who toppled Sharif ’s government in a bloodless coup in 1999. Musharraf was later forced to quit after the party of former prime minister Benazir Bhutto came into power.

He was declared a fugitive in 2013 and since then has been living in self-exile in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, to avoid arrest on criminal charges. Musharraf recently quit his political party indicating he had no plan to return home, despite having earlier said he wanted to run for a seat in parliament.

 ?? B.K. BANGASH THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Former Pakistani prime minister Nawaz Sharif is in London with his ailing wife, but says he will return to Pakistan.
B.K. BANGASH THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Former Pakistani prime minister Nawaz Sharif is in London with his ailing wife, but says he will return to Pakistan.

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