Cape Times

Anti-corruption court indicts ousted PM

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ISLAMABAD: A Pakistani anti-corruption court yesterday indicted ousted former prime minister Nawaz Sharif and his daughter over allegation­s linked to ownership of London properties, opening a trial that could see the former leader jailed.

The Sharifs have called the corruption proceeding­s against them a conspiracy, hinting at interventi­on by the powerful military, but opponents have hailed it as a rare example of the rich and powerful being held accountabl­e.

Sharif, 67, resigned in July after the Supreme Court disqualifi­ed him from holding office over an undeclared source of income, but the veteran leader maintains his grip on the ruling Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) party.

A witness in court said Sharif, his daughter Maryam, as well as her husband Muhammad Safdar, had all been indicted by the court of the anti-corruption agency, the National Accountabi­lity Bureau (NAB). They pleaded not guilty. Maryam and Safdar were present in court, but Sharif, who was prime minister twice in the 1990s, sent a representa­tive while he tends to his ailing wife in Britain as she undergoes cancer treatment.

Outside the court, Maryam again hinted at military interferen­ce in the judicial process by saying the trial was “a repeat of 1999”, the year her father was toppled in a military coup led by former army chief Pervez Musharraf.

“These courts aren’t new for me. It has happened in 1999,” Maryam added, without elaboratin­g.

It is not clear if she was comparing the trial with the 1999 coup, or subsequent corruption accusation­s and investigat­ions that Musharraf ordered into Sharif.

Sharif ’s disqualifi­cation stemmed from the Panama Papers leaks last year that appeared to show that his daughter and two sons owned offshore holding companies registered in the British Virgin Islands and used them to buy posh flats in London.

The Supreme Court initially declined to dismiss Sharif but ordered an investigat­ion into his family’s wealth.

A separate Supreme Court-appointed panel said the family’s wealth did not match its income, and accused Maryam and her brothers of signing forged documents to obscure ownership of offshore companies used to buy the London flats.

After the probe, the top court disqualifi­ed Sharif and ordered the NAB to investigat­e and conduct a trial. Sharif denies ever receiving the small source of income that led to his disqualifi­cation.

The NAB has in the past been described as toothless because of its low conviction rates, especially when it comes to powerful politician­s, and investigat­ions that last many years.

But the Supreme Court has ordered the trial to be concluded within six months.

Opening arguments are due to begin on October 26.

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