Former prime ministers Nawa
z Sharif and Shahid Khaqan Abbasi and journalist Cyril Al
meida Monday denied allegations of high treason made against them in a petition filed in the Lahore High Court (LHC).
As a three-judge bench headed by J
ustice Syed Mazahar Ali Akbar Naqvi resumed hearing of the case, Nawaz, Abbasi and Almeida’s lawyers furnished their clients’ formal responses to the allegations made against them.
In the petition, Nawa
z Sharif has been accused of treason for trying to defame the state institutions through an interview to Almeida. Abbasi has been accused of defying his oath of office by disclosing the minutes of a National Security Committee (NSC) meeting to Nawa
z Sharif.
In his response to the petition, Nawaz termed the allegations levelled against him as ‘unimaginable’ and questioned how his ‘patriotism’ could be doubted in the light of his services to the country. “A grave allegation such as treason is unimaginable [for me],” he stated in his response. “This raises many questions in my mind. Are the millions of Pakistani people who made me the PM traitors too? Have the country’s institutions and agencies failed that they did not know of my treason. Is someone who rids the country of terrorism a traitor?” he asked in the written statement. “The country’s biggest court declared the measures of a dictator as unconstitutional, and asked a treason case to be filed against him. Where is that dictator now? He has been making a mockery of the judicial system for so long?” he said, and argued that the petiti
on shows a complete lack of good faith and that has been filed only for political sensationalism, hence merits to be dismissed with exemplary costs.
In his response, Abbasi vehemently denied the allegations made against him by the petitioner, saying his meeting with Nawaz mentioned in the petition was purely concerning the issues relating to the PML-N and that matters of the NSC were not discussed in it. He said the allegations against him were ‘unfounded’ and based on ‘pure assumptions and surmises’, urging the court to dismiss those.
In his response, Al
meida defended his interview with Nawa
z Sharif, saying he had quoted the three-time former prime minister ‘verbatim’.
He said the contents of the interview were ‘written verbatim’ and that ‘no malice or ulterior motive’ can be attributed to him. Al
meida denied that he was taken to Multan to interview Nawa
z Sharif by a special airplane. “The petitioner’s unsubstantiated claims reek of malice and ill-will towards Al
meida … they have knowingly led astray this Honourable Court from the facts […] to suit their own motives. The petitioner has taken one statement out of context while ignoring the entire news article, which includes rather important public interest statements and has to be read as a whole,” the written response by the journalist maintained.
At the outset of the hearing, J
ustice Naqvi asked why didn’t Nawa
z Sharif appear before the court. “Law is equal for everyone … if Nawa
z Sharif intended to not attend the hearing, he should have submitted his exemption plea,” he remarked.
Adjourning the case until November 12
, the LHC bench directed all three respondents to ensure their presence on the next hearing.
Published in Daily Times, October 23rd 2018.