The Borneo Post

Pakistan’s top court rejects challenges to removal of ex-PM Sharif

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ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Supreme Court yesterday rejected petitions seeking a review of its July 28 ruling that disqualifi­ed Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif from office, upholding a verdict likely to influence the next general election, due in mid-2018.

After an investigat­ion into the Sharif family’s wealth, the Supreme Court employed a littleused constituti­onal provision to rule Sharif unfit to hold office because he did not declare a small source of income, which he has disputed receiving.

The country’s top court also disqualifi­ed three of Sharif’s children, including heir-apparent Maryam and her husband, besides ordering a criminal investigat­ion into the Sharifs and Finance Minister Ishaq Dar, who has stayed in his post.

Yesterday, a five-judge bench dismissed the petitions filed by the Sharifs and Dar, without specifying reasons.

“All the review petitions stand dismissed,” said Asif Saeed Khosa, who headed the bench, which is expected to provide the reasons for its decision next week.

It remains unclear, however, whether the Sharifs will be disqualifi­ed for a fixed time, perhaps several years, or be barred from office forever.

That could have major implicatio­ns for Nawaz and his daughter Maryam. She is being touted as a future leader of the ruling Pakistan Muslim League- Nawaz party, and is likely to run for parliament in the 2018 polls.

The ruling party has portrayed the Supreme Court decision as a slap for the electorate in the nuclear-armed nation.

“The right to fair trial, which is the right of 210 million people of Pakistan, was not exercised in regard to Nawaz Sharif and his family,” said Anusha Rahman, a government minister.

But Fawad Chaudhry, a senior official of the opposition Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party, called the verdict a “victory of good governance in Pakistan”.

Sharif’s disqualifi­cation stems from the Panama Papers leaks in 2016 which appeared to show that his daughter and two sons owned offshore holding companies registered in the British Virgin Islands and used them to buy properties in London.

In April, the Supreme Court ruled there was insufficie­nt evidence to remove Sharif from office - by a split 2- 3 verdict - over the Panama revelation­s but it ordered further investigat­ions into his family’s wealth.

The judges in July said Sharif did not declare a monthly salary, equivalent to US$ 2,722, from a company owned by his son when the veteran leader, who had held power twice in the 1990s, become prime minister for the third time. — Reuters

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Nawaz Sharif

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