Deccan Chronicle

Pervez can’t hold office

Court bars Musharraf from contesting polls for life

- SHAFQAT ALI | DC ISLAMABAD, APRIL 30

Virtually sealing his political comeback plans, a provincial High Court on Monday banned former Pakistani military ruler Pervez Musharraf from contesting elections for the rest of his life on a day another put him in judicial custody till three days after the general elections on May 11.

A four-judge bench of the Peshawar High Court headed by Chief Justice Dost Muhammad Khan imposed the ban while dismissing Musharraf ’s appeal challengin­g the rejection of his nomination papers for May 11 general election.

The lifetime ban was imposed because Musharraf had abrogated the Constituti­on twice and detained judges during the 2007 emergency, the bench said.

Musharraf was barred from contesting polls to the national and provincial assemblies and the Senate, it said.

Meanwhile, Musharraf will spend the election day under house arrest with an anti-terrorism court today sending him to judicial custody for a fortnight in the Benazir Bhutto assassinat­ion case in 2007.

Musharraf was not presented before the judge for today's hearing for security reasons, said chief prosecutor Chaudhry Zulfiqar Ali of the Federal Investigat­ion Agency.

Though Musharraf was remanded to judicial cus- Islamabad: Pakistan Tehrik-eInsaf (PTI) chief Imran Khan said on Tuesday that if voted to power his party will make Pakistan an Islamic welfare state. “We will make it an Islamic welfare state and introduce the system of justice and humanity,” the PTI leader said. Addressing a public meeting in Mianwali, Mr Khan said the linguistic politics and the politics of regionalis­m would be buried and there would be only one nation for which Pakistan was created. tody for 14 days, the 69year-old former military strongman will continue to be restricted to his plush farmhouse at Chak Shahzad on the outskirts of Islamabad, which has been declared a “sub-jail”.

The court fixed the next hearing on May 14, three days after the May 11 elections.

The 69-year-old Musharraf, who heads the All Pakistan Muslim League, returned to Pakistan last month after nearly four years in self-exile to make a political comeback but he has been dragged to court over several issues, including the imposition of emergency rule in 2007.

Pakistani authoritie­s have already disqualifi­ed him from contesting the election, effectivel­y putting an end to his ambitions for a political comeback.

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