LAHORE, June 11(ABC): A special court hearing the Rs16 billion money laundering case against Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and his son, Punjab Chief Minister Hamza Shehbaz, was told by the former on Saturday that it is a “pack of lies” and “will be buried”.
PM Shehbaz and Hamza were summoned in Special Court (Central) today for questioning, with the prosecutors having concluded their arguments against an extension in interim bail which the father and son have sought.
The court reserved its verdict on all requests for bail, including those by PM Shehbaz and Hamza.
In his plea, PM Shehbaz stated: “I am obliged to inform the court of the truth regarding my bail.”
He said that the case by the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) is identical to that being pursued by the National Accountability Bureau (NAB).
“The Ashiana [Housing Scheme] and Ramzan Sugar Mills cases were built against me,” said Shehbaz.
“You have no ownership of them?” asked the judge.
“I have no share in either,” PM Shehbaz responded, adding that in the Ashiana case, he was accused of the misuse of his authority as chief minister.
“NAB moved the Supreme Court against me, despite the fact that the Lahore High Court had issued a detailed verdict in my case,” he said.
He said that the then chief justice had also asked for proof of corruption against him.
PM Shehbaz went on to state: “The FIA visited me twice when I was in NAB detention, but I refused to answer without my attorney’s input.”
He said that NAB “panicked and fled” from there, while the FIA was provided with all the facts verbally.
“My cases were decided on their merit, and I emerged clean,” he remarked.
The premier added that a man’s honour is his greatest asset and that “severe” allegations have been made against him.
“I faced countless hearings and trials. The FIA was admonished for not presenting a challan. I believe the FIA was preparing for an arrest, hence the challan was delayed,” he added.
He reiterated that he is neither a director nor a stakeholder of the Ramzan Sugar Mills.
PM Shehbaz continued: “[All this] harmed the family’s sugar mills. Why would I engage in corruption and money laundering and harm the family business?”
He said that he “had the legal right to grant the business a subsidy”.
“The entire case is built on lies and will be buried,” PM Shehbaz said.
For his part, attorney Amjad Pervez stated that the fact that Shehbaz Sharif and Hamza Shehbaz had previously been interrogated in jail by the FIA was sufficient proof for their bail and that no further evidence could be presented.
Shehbaz’s counsel stated that a witness on page 2 of volume 6 did not provide the statement mentioned in the challan.
FIA Prosecutor Farooq Bajwa said he seeks to conclude his arguments.
The court asked the FIA if bankers were called as witnesses in the investigation, and the FIA prosecutor said that they were not.
He said: “I would not state anything that is not a part of the records. The entire matter has been presented to the court.”
“I will speak in accordance with the law, I will not simply oppose him as a prosecutor,” said Bajwa. “When the FIA made this case, there was no direct investigation.”
The FIA prosecutor added: “I would not engage in such trickery for which I have no explanation.”
He said that “these are political figures”, and that “such is the evidence collected when such cases are opened”.
“Two cheques dated 2015 and 2013 were deposited into Gulzar’s account,” said the FIA prosecutor elaborating on “evidence” found.
He said that it is rare for the challan to appear while the bail period has not ended.
Bajwa said that the FIA’s evidence was “not ill intentioned” and that as much evidence as possible was collected in the case.
According to him, suspects Masroor Anwar and Usman were not interrogated.
To this, Pervez said: “The case has been ongoing for more than a year and now we discover that the suspects were not made part of the inquiry.”
“All this has to be disclosed in the initial hearing,” he added.
The FIA prosecutor responded by saying that that two cheques had been deposited into suspect Gulzar’s account, which is direct evidence.
“So how is this illegal?” the court asked the FIA prosecutor, to which his response was: “This is something that even the other respondents cannot comment on. No one knows how the cheques were deposited.”
Pervez said that it must then be examined if depositing a cheque constitutes a crime. “What the FIA is saying does not constitute a crime,” he said.
The counsels for both the defense and the prosecution submitted their written arguments to the court.
It is pertinent to mention here that the special court in Lahore had summoned the father-son duo for their indictment in the case in April but it was deferred due to the premier’s foreign engagements.