The Pak Banker

Zardari says Nawaz given better treatment

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In a thinly veiled assertion that he is being treated unfairly due to his ethnicity, former president Asif Ali Zardari on Wednesday remarked that PML-N supremo Nawaz Sharif's domicile was "better" than his.

Speaking outside the Islamabad High Court (IHC), where he had appeared for a bail hearing against his wishes, Zardari was asked to give his opinion on whether the laws were different for him and the PML-N leader.

To this, he simply said, "Mian Sahab's domicile is better than mine".He was referring to underlying resentment among Pakistan's smaller ethno-linguistic groups against the dominant Punjabi ethnic group. Zardari had been told to show up in person for the hearing even though his counsel had pleaded that he not be required to do so due to his ill health.

When asked whether he would advise Nawaz to return to Pakistan, the PPP stalwart said he would not give anyone any advice, but if someone wants to, they can.

Earlier, the IHC had accepted the former president's bail plea in the New York apartment case, granting him security from arrest till July 28. A division bench comprising IHC Chief Justice Athar Minallah and Justice Aamer Farooq heard the plea. The court accepted the plea against surety bonds of Rs0.5 million till July 28 and issued a notice to NAB.

Before the hearing, Zardari's counsel had requested the court to allow the vehicle of the former president to enter the court's premises on medical and security grounds. A day earlier, the IHC had rejected a request to hear the pre-arrest bail plea in Zardari's absence.

Zardari's counsel, Farooq H Naek had pleaded that the former president couldn't appear before the court due to health problems and prayed that the court grant him bail in the NAB inquiry in his absence. He had contended that Zardari was under treatment at a private hospital in Karachi.

Responding to the argument, Justice Aamer Farooq had reminded the counsel that the presence of the applicant is necessary in prearrest bail cases. The PPP co-chairperso­n had approached the IHC seeking pre-arrest bail after the National Accountabi­lity Bureau (NAB) opened an investigat­ion into an apartment allegedly owned by him in New York, US.

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