The Pak Banker

Psychologi­cal games played to pressurise us: Bilawal

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PPP chief Bilawal BhuttoZard­ari on Monday accused the current regime of playing "psychologi­cal games" with him and his family and "threatenin­g" him to change his stance otherwise his father, party colleagues and workers will face the music.

Bilawal was speaking to reporters outside an accountabi­lity court in Islamabad, where former president Asif Ali Zardari had appeared for a hearing in a case pertaining to the Toshakhana reference.

Bilawal said his party had stood up against military dictators, be it Yayha Khan, Ziaul Haq or Pervez Musharraf and will continue to resist against the current "hybrid regime" as well. "We feel that we are being pressurise­d and threatened to toe the line, to follow the script, to agree to repeal the 18th Amendment, to alter the NFC award, to allow this house to pass a black law. But we won't budge from our stance," he announced.

"I want to say this through the media that if you want to arrest my entire family, do it. We will not allow any harm to befall the 18th Amendment or the 1973 Constituti­on. Do whatever you want." He also criticised National Accountabi­lity Bureau's (NAB) lawyer for "abusing" Zardari's counsel in the court, saying that the prosecutor resorted to such behaviour because he "did not have any arguments".

The PPP lawmaker lamented that Zardari, who had obtained bail from the Islamabad High Court on medical grounds last year, was ordered to appear before court in person even though he had underlying conditions and was at risk of contractin­g Covid19. He added that the hearing was adjourned without any developmen­t in the case "so that Zardari would have to appear before the court and expose himself once again on another day".

Former president Zardari had arrived in court with his children Bilawal and Aseefa Bhutto-Zardari amid heavy security. Aseefa, while sharing images of police deployed near the court, had criticised the arrangemen­ts and said: "Called to court only to have our lawyers forcibly stopped by LEAs All access points blocked by police. These are the excessive security arrangemen­t for the Court hearing of a civilian elected President (who has never run from Courts)."

Earlier, the hearing of the Toshakhana case was marred by bickering between NAB prosecutor Sardar Muzaffar Abbasi and the legal counsels of Zardari and PML-N supremo Nawaz Sharif, both of whom are nominated in the reference.

Supreme Court lawyer Barrister Tassaduq Hanif told the court that he was manhandled by the police while Zardari's legal counsel Farooq H. Naek said he was not being allowed to enter the court premises.

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