The Free Press Journal

Pakistan SC concludes Panama case hearing against Sharif, family

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Pakistan’s Supreme Court on Friday concluded hearing the high-profile Panama Papers case against Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and his family for alleged corruption, but reserved its verdict that could jeopardise his political future.

The three-member bench headed by Justice Ejaz Afzal and comprising Justice Sheikh Azmat Saeed and Justice Ijazul Ahsan did not immediatel­y give any date to give its judgment.

Justice Saeed observed that the court will not deviate from any law while delivering its judgment. “We are conscious of the fundamenta­l rights of petitioner­s and respondent­s.”

The apex court also opened the final part of the 10-volume report submitted by the Joint Investigat­ion Team it had set up to probe the allegation­s of money laundering by Sharif.

The JIT has recommende­d that the report’s Volume-X should be treated as confidenti­al as it contains the details of correspond­ence with other countries.

The court has ordered authoritie­s to provide a copy of the volume to Sharif's lawyer Khawaja Harris.

Exercising their right to respond to the arguments by defence lawyers, the petitioner­s in their brief remarks urged the court to disqualify Sharif and order a trial against him for allegedly hiding assets and failing to disclose the sources of income used to set up businesses by his children.

“The prime minister has failed to give satisfacto­ry answer to the allegation of money laundering and should be disqualifi­ed,” argued the lawyer of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf chief Imran Khan, one of the petitioner­s against Sharif.

The opposition parties in Pakistan have taken on Sharif seeking his disqualifi­cation after the Panama Papers last year revealed that he and his sons — Hassan and Hussain — and his daughter Maryam — owned offshore companies which managed their family’s properties. The assets in question include four expensive flats in Park Lane, London. Sharif and his family has rejected the allegation­s.

But the judges hearing the case have made observatio­ns that Sharif and his children have been unable to satisfy the court about the sources of money used to buy these properties. The Supreme Court decision in the case is keenly awaited as it would determine the course of Pakistan's polity and with it Sharif's.

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