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EX-PAKISTAN PM NAWAZ SHARIF FREED AS COURT SUSPENDS CORRUPTION SENTENCE

▶ High Court grants bail for Nawaz Sharif, daughter Maryam and son-in-law pending appeal over case

- BEN FARMER Islamabad

The former prime minister of Pakistan was freed from prison after the Islamabad High Court suspended his sentence for corruption.

Nawaz Sharif was granted bail yesterday, with his daughter Maryam, pending an appeal against their July conviction by an anti-corruption tribunal.

The decision was hailed by his supporters who say he was the victim of politicall­y motivated collusion between the judiciary and the security establishm­ent to remove him from office.

The three-time prime minister was ousted from office and then prosecuted after the 2016 Panama Papers leak linked his family to offshore companies and four luxury flats in London’s Park Lane. He was jailed for 10 years, his daughter for seven and his son-in-law for two.

The court said he had been unable to explain how he acquired the money to buy the expensive properties while his daughter had tried to conceal their ownership. Mr Sharif said the flats belonged to his sons.

While the pair still face an appeal and a possible return to jail, the court appeared critical of the prosecutio­n case.

“The prosecutio­n has failed to show the properties belong to Nawaz Sharif. It also failed to prove how was Maryam Nawaz sentenced under the same charge sheet that convicted Nawaz Sharif,” Justice Athar Minallah told Islamabad High Court.

Analysts suggested that even the temporary release of Mr Sharif could galvanise his party, the Pakistan Muslim League (PML-N) after it was swept aside at the July general election by Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party.

“Today the court has suspended the decision that was based on revenge,” former PML-N minister Ahsan Iqbal said. “This trial is important because even a blind person in Pakistan will see that there was neither law nor constituti­on in the decision and it was just prepoll rigging to pave the way for Imran Khan to win elections.”

The PML-N claimed it was the victim of a concerted campaign to weaken it in advance of the election as the powerful military took revenge for Mr Sharif challengin­g generals on their alleged support of militant proxies and India policy.

The army has denied meddling in the election.

Mr Sharif was convicted in his absence in July while at his wife’s bedside in London.

He returned days before the election to receive his sentence and was in prison when his wife, Kulsoom Nawaz, died last week.

“Justice has been served, and I congratula­te Nawaz Sharif’s supporters,” former foreign minister Khawaja Asif, a Sharif ally, said outside the court.

Lt Gen Talat Masood, a political commentato­r, said that even if the decision was reversed, the release went towards vindicatin­g the PML-N’s argument. He said it was also a victory for Pakistan’s independen­t judiciary.

The PML-N has been under the control of Mr Sharif’s younger brother, Shahbaz, who is widely considered to lack his sibling’s political charisma.

Lt Gen Masood said: “It will put life into the opposition. They were completely demoralise­d, in a way.”

Mr Sharif remains a political heavyweigh­t in Pakistan, particular­ly in the populous province of Punjab, while his daughter is seen as his likely successor.

The court’s decision came as the prime minister was making his first overseas visit, with trips to Saudi Arabia and the UAE.

Mr Khan had campaigned for an investigat­ion into Mr Sharif’s finances from the moment the Panama Papers were leaked. Mr Sharif came to symbolise the venal political elite which Mr Khan sought to remove as he gained widespread support with his populist anti-corruption promises.

Senator Javed Faisal, a close aide of Mr Khan, stressed the court had only suspended the sentences, but had not acquitted the Sharifs.

“Their supporters should not celebrate so much as they will most likely have to go to Adiala prison again,” he said.

“The Sharif family still has not proven where the billions of rupees came from for their property,” said Fawad Chaudhry, the government’s informatio­n minister, according to PTI’s official Twitter account.

The court also ordered the release of Mr Sharif, his daughter and son-in-law Mohammad Safdar, once they had each posted a bond of half a million rupees, about Dh15,000.

The prosecutor­s from Pakistan’s anti-corruption body, the National Accountabi­lity Bureau, said they would appeal against the ruling and take their case against Mr Sharif to the country’s Supreme Court.

 ?? Reuters ?? Supporters of ex-prime minister Nawaz Sharif celebrate after the Islamabad High Court suspended his sentence yesterday
Reuters Supporters of ex-prime minister Nawaz Sharif celebrate after the Islamabad High Court suspended his sentence yesterday

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