Oman Daily Observer

Sharif vows to fight corruption charges

-

ISLAMABAD: Ousted Pakistani prime minister Nawaz Sharif vowed to fight graft accusation­s after he appeared before an anti-corruption court on Tuesday, kicking off a trial threatenin­g his party’s chances at the next general election due in mid-2018.

Returning to Pakistan following a month abroad, Sharif lashed out against the judiciary after briefly appearing before a National Accountabi­lity Bureau (NAB) court in Islamabad on three charges. He did not enter a plea.

“I am fighting baseless cases based on lies and also getting punished,” he told reporters.

TV channels reported that Sharif was scheduled to be formally charged on October 2, about two months after his disqualifi­cation by the Supreme Court for not declaring a small source of income that he denied receiving.

A Supreme Court-appointed panel has also alleged Sharif family’s wealth far exceeds its legal income.

Sharif, who returned from London on Monday, has portrayed his disqualifi­cation as efforts to subvert the will of the electorate.

“I hope that there might be some justice still alive,” Sharif said.

Sharif says the corruption claims against the family are politicall­y motivated, while his allies, including daughter and heir-apparent Maryam, have hinted Pakistan’s powerful military had a hand in his toppling. The military denies any such action.

Two of Sharif ’s sons and Maryam are also due to appear before a NAB court, as well as Finance Minister Ishaq Dar, a long-time ally who is married into the Sharif family.

“It’s a good thing that finally NAB and such institutio­ns are holding rich and powerful to account,” said Shafqat Mahmood, a senior member of the opposition Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party.

PTI, led by cricketer-turnedpoli­tician Imran Khan who doggedly pushed the Supreme Court into launching the corruption probe into Sharif, has called for an early election but it is unlikely the government will agree to that.

Sharif ’s return to Pakistan quashed growing speculatio­n that his absence was the start of another period in exile for the veteran leader whose three stints as prime minister were all cut short, including one by a military coup in 1999.

Analysts say Sharif ’s return to Pakistan was in large part due to fears of defections within the PML-N, a common occurrence in a nation where politician­s switch allegiance­s ahead of polls depending on which way the political winds are blowing.

 ?? — AFP ?? Nawaz Sharif speaks at a press conference after his appearance in front of an accountabi­lity court to face corruption charges, in Islamabad on Tuesday.
— AFP Nawaz Sharif speaks at a press conference after his appearance in front of an accountabi­lity court to face corruption charges, in Islamabad on Tuesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman