Gulf News

Sharif gets parole to attend wife’s funeral

KULSOOM NAWAZ WAS DIAGNOSED WITH LYMPHOMA LAST YEAR AND HAD BEEN RECEIVING TREATMENT IN LONDON

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Pakistan’s jailed former prime minister Nawaz Sharif, his daughter Maryam and son-in-law Captain (retired) Mohammad Safdar would be released on parole for a day to attend the funeral of Kulsoom Nawaz, GEO TV reported.

Kulsoom, the wife of Sharif, died yesterday in London after a long battle with cancer. She was 68. Her body will be brought back here and buried in Jati Umra Lahore residence of the Sharif family, reports said.

Sources told PTI that Sharif, Maryam and Safdar are being released on parole to attend the funeral.

“Prime Minister Imran Khan has ordered to facilitate the Sharif family regarding bringing back the body of Kulsoom and other matters,” sources said.

“The Sharif family has sought at least a three-day parole,” they added.

A request is necessary for parole to be granted.

Kulsoom Nawaz, the wife of former Pakistan prime minister Nawaz Sharif, died of cancer in London yesterday, as her husband remained locked up in jail in his home country following his fall from power.

Kulsoom, 68, who was first lady of Pakistan three times, was diagnosed with lymphoma in August last year and had been receiving treatment at a private hospital in London for months.

“Yes, the death of Begum Kulsoom Nawaz is confirmed,” Maryam Aurangzeb, a spokespers­on of Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N), Sharif’s party, told journalist­s.

Pakistani media reported that she had been put on life support and a ventilator earlier in the day.

Sharif was ousted from the premiershi­p a month before his wife’s diagnosis. He and the couple’s daughter Maryam Nawaz had left her in London and returned to Pakistan on July 13 this year in a bid to motivate support for the PML-N days before a general election.

They were immediatel­y jailed for corruption, with the party losing the July 25 vote to Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-eInsaf.

Sharif had been banned from running, but maintained his control over his eponymous party, and his return was seen as a failed gamble to save his political legacy. Conspiracy theories claiming that Nawaz was actually healthy, and that the Sharifs were faking her illness to gain sympathy, swirled in the final weeks of the acrimoniou­s campaign.

Kulsoom had been at her husband’s side throughout his decades-long political career, which saw him become prime minister of Pakistan three times while facing military coups, prison and exile.

“She was a brave lady,” Siddiq-ul-Farouq, a stalwart party loyalist, told journalist­s, describing her as well-educated and dignified.

Step into limelight

For years Kulsoom stayed out of politics, focusing on the couple’s family and home life. The couple have four children.

But after Sharif was first imprisoned following a military coup in 1999 Kulsoom stepped into the limelight, Farouq said.

“She told her father-in-law, ‘Dad, I have to go out,’ and he replied, ‘Daughter, you must go,’” he recounted.

Kulsoom took over leadership of the party, defying house arrest to attend street rallies standing up to military dictator General Pervez Musharraf and demanding her husband’s release. Sharif was eventually allowed to go into exile in Saudi Arabia in 2007.

“She fought against cancer with a lot of courage,” Farouq added.

The newly-elected Khan, a former cricket hero who had campaigned against the Sharifs for his entire 22-year-long political career, sent his condolence­s Tuesday.

“The Pakistan High Commission in the UK has been directed to provide all possible assistance to facilitate the heirs of Mrs Kulsoom Nawaz,” his office said in a statement.

 ??  ?? Kulsoom Nawaz
Kulsoom Nawaz
 ?? AFP ?? Kulsoom Nawaz had been at her husband’s side throughout his decades-long political career.
AFP Kulsoom Nawaz had been at her husband’s side throughout his decades-long political career.

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