Stabroek News

Pakistan’s top court rejects call to disqualify prime minister

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ISLAMABAD, (Reuters) Pakistan’s Supreme Court yesterday ruled there was insufficie­nt evidence to order Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif’s removal from office over corruption allegation­s levelled by the opposition, but it ordered further investigat­ions.

A verdict to dismiss Sharif would have left his party in power but would have brought turmoil at a time when Pakistan is experienci­ng modest growth and improved security, and the civilian government and powerful military have appeared to come to uneasy terms.

Two of five judges on the court bench recommende­d Sharif should step down, saying he was dishonest “to the nation as well as to the parliament”, but they were out voted.

Presenting its 549-page judgment amid tight security in the capital Islamabad, the court ordered a joint investigat­ion team be formed to look into allegation­s around three of Sharif’s four children using offshore companies to buy properties in London.

The team has two months to complete its inquiry, after which a special bench will decide what action to take, the court said in a ruling that opens with the epigraph from Mario Puzo’s novel “The Godfather”: “Behind every great fortune there is a crime”.

The prime minister and his children deny any wrongdoing.

Pakistan’s stock market jumped after the court’s decision with the benchmark index closing up 2.39 percent. Sharif is seen as pro-business.

Analysts and opposition politician­s said the ruling was a blow to Sharif’s credibilit­y and the inquiry’s findings could yet weaken the prime minister as he heads into a general election, due by May 2018.

But for now, Sharif and his ruling Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz, are celebratin­g.

Sharif’s daughter and his presumptiv­e political heir, Maryam Nawaz Sharif, posted a photo on Twitter of the family welcoming the court’s decision.

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Nawaz Sharif

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