Los Angeles Times

Pakistani leader steps down

Resignatio­n follows Supreme Court’s order for his dismissal in corruption case.

- By Aoun Sahi and Molly Hennessy-Fiske molly.hennessy-fiske @latimes.com Special correspond­ent Sahi reported from Islamabad, and Times staff writer Hennessy-Fiske reported from Beirut.

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif resigned Friday after the country’s Supreme Court disqualifi­ed him from office due to corruption charges he and his family have been battling.

“Following the verdict, Nawaz Sharif has resigned from his responsibi­lities as prime minister,” a spokesman for Sharif ’s office said in a statement.

The unanimous, fivejudge ruling — delivered to a packed courtroom in the nation’s capital — came after an investigat­ion into the family’s finances following the Panama Papers leak in 2015. Documents uncovered during the internatio­nal media investigat­ion linked Sharif ’s children to offshore companies that had not been revealed in financial disclosure­s.

After the ensuing investigat­ions, Judge Ejaz Afzal Khan said Sharif was no longer “eligible to be an honest member of the parliament.” The court had already recommende­d anticorrup­tion cases against Sharif, his daughter Maryam Nawaz, her husband Safdar, Finance Minister Ishaq Dar and others.

The election commission also disqualifi­ed Sharif from serving in parliament.

Sharif and his family have denied wrongdoing in the cases. Maryam Nawaz, who is also active in politics, tweeted after the verdict that her father was removed from office, “but only to see him return with greater force.” She asked her party to “stay strong.”

Sharif is not the first prime minister to leave office because of documents that came to light as part of the Panama Papers — leaked internal files from a Panamanian law firm that revealed means by which wealthy and powerful people hid their money.

Iceland’s prime minister was forced to resign after documents appeared to show that he and his wife concealed millions of dollars’ worth of investment­s in an offshore company.

Sharif is also not the first Pakistani prime minister forced from office — none of the country’s 18 prime ministers completed full terms. In 2012, the Supreme Court convicted then-Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani in a contempt case, forcing him to leave office.

Sharif, who was serving as prime minister for the third time, was less than a year from becoming the first to complete a full term, but had been dogged by the corruption allegation­s. Much of what the Panama Papers revealed was the subject of a federal inquiry in the mid-1990s, but the new allegation­s fueled ongoing drama in the press and on social media.

It was not immediatel­y clear who would succeed him. The court asked President Mamnoon Hussain to “ensure continuati­on of the democratic process,” and the president was expected to convene the National Assembly once Sharif’s party nominates his successor, who will serve until the next election in March 2018. Sharif’s brother Shehbaz, chief minister of southern Punjab province, is a strong contender.

The verdict was announced amid heightened security, with about 3,000 armed police and members of the Pakistan Rangers paramilita­ry force deployed near and around the court. When the verdict came, opposition supporters erupted in applause, chanted slogans and scattered candy.

“I am so happy today. It is proved today that Nawaz Sharif and his cronies are corrupt,” said college student Kamran Ali, 22. “This decision is the start of a new era in Pakistan. There is no room for corruption in the politics.”

Opposition leaders also celebrated.

“This decision marks the start of a new era in the history of Pakistan, where justice will be held supreme,” said Imran Khan, head of one of the major opposition parties. “Pakistan has won today.”

At a news conference, Khan congratula­ted the nation on Sharif ’s removal and said a celebratio­n of the legal battle against the “corrupt ruling elite” would be held Sunday in the capital.

Sharif’s supporters decried the verdict, and vowed that he would return to office. “History is a witness that whenever Nawaz Sharif was removed unjustly, the people of Pakistan brought him back to parliament with a greater majority,” said Marriyum Aurangzeb, leader of Sharif ’s party.

 ?? Arshad Arbab European Pressphoto Agency ?? A CROWD celebrates in Peshawar, Pakistan, after the country’s Supreme Court disqualifi­ed Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif from office. The unanimous ruling came after an investigat­ion into his family’s finances.
Arshad Arbab European Pressphoto Agency A CROWD celebrates in Peshawar, Pakistan, after the country’s Supreme Court disqualifi­ed Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif from office. The unanimous ruling came after an investigat­ion into his family’s finances.
 ?? T. Mughal EPA ?? S H A R I F, who has denied wrongdoing, had been ousted twice before.
T. Mughal EPA S H A R I F, who has denied wrongdoing, had been ousted twice before.

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