Pak court grants pre-arrest bail to Shehbaz Sharif

Wednesday 10th June 2020 06:00 EDT
 
 

Lahore: A Pakistani court granted pre-arrest bail till June 17 to Leader of the Opposition in the National Assembly Shehbaz Sharif, a day after anti-graft team raided his residence to arrest him in cases related to money laundering and assets beyond known sources of income. Shehbaz, who is the president of the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz and younger brother of former prime minister Nawaz Sharif, was granted bail till June 17 by a Lahore High Court division bench, reports said.

The court also asked him to submit a surety bond worth Rs 500,000. During the hearing, Shehbaz's lawyers claimed that even though he was summoned by the National Accountability Bureau (NAB) on June 2, warrants were dated May 28, implying that the anti-corruption watchdog had already decided to arrest him, the paper said.

His legal team had filed the pre-arrest bail petition on June 1, a day before he was required to appear before the NAB. However, the bail petition could not be fixed for hearing before the bench last week. For a third time, Shehbaz had refused to appear before NAB, citing health concerns.

'It has been widely reported in the media that some NAB officials have tested positive for Covid-19. Please appreciate [that] I am a cancer survivor and 69 years old. I have been advised limited exposure on account of the peculiar background of low immunity,' he said in a statement submitted to the NAB.

He said that he was available to answer any queries by the investigation team via Skype. After he did not appear for the NAB hearing, a team of officials from the NAB and police raided his residence in Lahore's Model Town to arrest him but left on learning that he was not present there.

If Shehbaz had been arrested by the NAB before the hearing on his pre-arrest bail, his petition would have become infructuous. Speaking to the media after the hearing, PML-N leader Shahid Khaqan Abbasi said that despite accusing Shehbaz of a host of corruption-related crimes, NAB has yet to prove a single allegation.


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