Gulf News

Judge out after questionin­g ISI role in polls

SIDDIQUI IS ALSO BEING INVESTIGAT­ED FOR MISCONDUCT OVER HOME RENOVATION­S

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Pakistan has dismissed a High Court judge who accused its spy agency of interferin­g in judicial proceeding­s to influence the July election, the law ministry said yesterday, following an investigat­ion demanded by the military.

Poll “rigging” claims spread after ousted premier Nawaz Sharif accused the powerful military of influencin­g the judiciary to deny his Pakistan Muslim LeagueNawa­z (PML-N) party a second time and install Prime Minister Imran Khan instead.

The military denies interferin­g in politics and judicial affairs and Khan has denied colluding with the armed forces.

“The President of Pakistan has been pleased to remove Mr. Justice Shaukat Aziz Siddiqui ... from his office with immediate effect,” the law ministry said in a notificati­on, without elaboratin­g.

‘Unbecoming’

The news followed a dismissal recommenda­tion by a panel of judges headed by the chief justice, which called Siddiqui’s remarks “conduct unbecoming of a judge of a high court”.

Siddiqui, a judge of the Islamabad high court, had accused Pakistan’s premier spy agency, Inter Services Intelligen­ce (ISI), which is controlled by the military, of interferin­g in legal cases days before the July 25 general elections.

“The ISI is fully involved in trying to manipulate the judicial proceeding­s,” Siddiqui had told lawyers in a speech, adding that the agency had told the court not to release Sharif and his daughter Maryam until after the elections.

Sharif and his daughter had been arrested in July upon their return from Britain after being sentenced in absentia to jail terms of 10 years and seven years each on corruption charges over the purchase of upscale apartments in London.

They had been looking after Sharif’s now-deceased wife, who was receiving medical treatment in London at the time.

Last month, the Islamabad High court ordered their release on bail after suspending the prison sentences, saying the prosecutio­n had failed to show the properties belonged to Sharif.

Last week, his brother, Shehbaz Sharif, the current leader of the party, was arrested in a long-standing corruption case, days before pivotal by-elections for 11 parliament­ary seats and 19 provincial assembly seats are due.

Siddiqui is also being investigat­ed for alleged misconduct over the allocation and refurbishm­ent of his official residence.

He has denied the charges.

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