Arab Times

Pak’s ex-PM Sharif gets 10-yr jail term

Kashmir clash claims 3

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ISLAMABAD, July 7, (Agencies): A Pakistani court on Friday sentenced ousted prime Minister Nawaz Sharif to 10 years in prison for corrupt practices linked to his family’s purchase of upscale London flats, in a major blow to his party ahead of general elections on July 25.

The guilty verdict in absentia against Sharif, 68, threatens to end the career of one of Pakistan’s most high-profile politician­s of the last four decades, a political survivor who was prime minister three times.

Sharif’s daughter, Maryam, widely seen as his chosen political heir, was sentenced to seven years in prison and is disqualifi­ed from contesting the elections. Maryam’s husband and Pakistan Muslim LeagueNawa­z (PML-N) lawmaker Muhammad Safdar was handed a year in jail.

“Today’s verdict shows that these Avenfield apartments were purchased using corruption money,” prosecutio­n lawyer Sardar Muzaffar Abbasi told reporters, citing the name of the apartment building in London.

Without setting a date, Sharif said he would return to Pakistan from London where he is tending to his wife, Kulsoom, who is being treated for cancer and is in a coma after suffering a heart attack last month.

“As soon as she gains consciousn­ess, and I talk to her, I will go back,” Sharif told media in London. “I will continue my struggle even in the jail.”

Sharif would face arrest on arrival in Pakistan just before the election, in which his party is in a tight race with opposition figure Imran Khan’s party.

Both Sharif and his daughter Maryam, who is also currently in London, denied wrongdoing and will appeal the decision, said Sharif ally Tariq Fazal Chaudhry.

“The people of Pakistan and PML-N reject this decision,” said Sharif’s brother Shehbaz, who took over as PML-N president after his brother was banned from holding office for life. Shehbaz is expected to be its prime ministeria­l candidate. “This decision is based on injustice.” The National Accountabi­lity Bureau (NAB) court ordered Sharif to pay a fine of £8 million ($10.6 million) and fined Maryam £2 million, while ordering the confiscati­on of the London properties on behalf of the Pakistani government, Abbasi said.

If Sharif returns he will be arrested on arrival under the law, though he could later be freed by a separate court pending appeal, Abbasi added.

The NAB court accused Sharif and his family of money laundering and being unable to legitimate­ly show the money trail for the purchase of several luxurious properties in London, mostly in the mid-1990s.

A copy of the verdict said the Sharif family had failed to prove a legal source of income for the purchase of Avenfield apartments in 1993, 1995 and 1996.

Sharif was ousted by the Supreme Court in July 2017 and barred from politics for being “dishonest” by failing to report a monthly income of 10,000 Emirati dirhams ($2,723) from a company owned by his son. He denies drawing the monthly salary. But he has kept de facto control of the Pakistan Muslim LeagueNawa­z (PML-N) party that he founded.

The decision comes at a time of growing suspicion of military meddling in politics ahead of the polls, as well as media complaints of being muzzled.

Sharif had denounced the court proceeding­s against him as politicall­y motivated and a judicial witch-hunt, often suggesting the military was to blame.

“Justice has been massacred,” Maryam’s husband Safdar said after the verdict.

Pakistan’s military, which has ruled the nucleararm­ed country for almost half its history, denies involvemen­t in civilian politics. But the military ended Sharif’s second stint in power in 1999 in a bloodless coup.

Nawaz

3 killed in Kashmir:

Two young men and a teenage girl were killed in disputed Kashmir on Saturday when government forces fired at anti-India protesters who disrupted a military-led operation against rebels, police and medics said.

As soldiers and counterins­urgency police launched a cordon and search operation in southern Redwani village, hundreds of villagers confronted them by chanting anti-India slogans and throwing stones, police said.

The clashes intensifie­d as residents from neighborin­g villages joined the protesters, leading to confrontat­ions at several locations in the area, police said.

18 dead as truck falls off mountain:

Authoritie­s say a truck carrying constructi­on workers fell off a mountain road in Nepal, killing at least 18 people and injuring 14 others.

The Mustang district administra­tion office said the truck dropped about 50 meters (160 feet). Rescue helicopter­s took those injured in Friday’s crash to hospitals for treatment.

The workers were heading to a road constructi­on site.

Police were investing the cause of the accident, but the conditions of roads and vehicles in Nepal are often poor.

Bomb kills Afghan district chief:

An Afghan official says a district chief has been killed in a roadside bomb blast in western Ghor province.

Abdul Hai Khateby, provincial governor’s spokesman, said Saturday that Mirza Mohammad Ibrahim was targeted in Charsada district and was on duty at the time.

No one claimed responsibi­lity for the attack, but Khateby blamed Taliban insurgents for the attack.

In eastern Ghazni province, Taliban fighters ambushed a police convoy, killing four police and wounding six others, said Arif Noori, spokesman for the governor.

Roadside mines kill 3 children:

A government official says two roadside mines possibly meant for later use against security forces have exploded in a residentia­l area in Afghanista­n’s eastern Ghazni province, killing three children.

Arif Noori, spokesman for the governor of Ghazi province, said Friday that the mines detonated today in the remote Gilan district, killing three children and wounding seven others.

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