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Sharif`s brother held in Pakistani corruption probe
Ousted Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif`s brother, Shahbaz, has been detained under tough anti-corruption laws following his acquittal on hijacking charges this week, as informed by the officials on Wednesday.
Ousted Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif's brother, Shahbaz, has been detained under tough anti-corruption laws following his acquittal on hijacking charges this week, as informed by the officials on Wednesday.
They said that Shahbaz was detained by the National Accountability Bureau (NAB), after a state appeal against his earlier acquittal was dismissed in the Sindh high court on Tuesday.
The former chief minister of Central Punjab province has been in detention since Nawaz Sharif was ousted in a coup by General Pervez Musharraf in October 1999. He had been charged with allegedly helping his brother prevent a plane carrying Musharraf and 198 other passengers from landing in Pakistan on the night of the coup.
Prison officials in Karachi said that there was no longer a case against him in Sindh and he could be shifted to Lahore, the Punjab capital, under anti-corruption laws allowing suspects to be detained pending investigations.
Five of his co-accused in the hijacking case – including Sharif's former chief advisor, Ghous Ali Shah, former Pakistan International Airlines Chairman Shahid Khakan Abbasi and former Anti-corruption Bureau Chief Saifur Rehman -- were also acquitted but remained in NAB custody. Sharif lost his appeal against his life sentence for hijacking but a similar verdict for terrorism was overtrned. Bureau Report
The former chief minister of Central Punjab province has been in detention since Nawaz Sharif was ousted in a coup by General Pervez Musharraf in October 1999. He had been charged with allegedly helping his brother prevent a plane carrying Musharraf and 198 other passengers from landing in Pakistan on the night of the coup.
Prison officials in Karachi said that there was no longer a case against him in Sindh and he could be shifted to Lahore, the Punjab capital, under anti-corruption laws allowing suspects to be detained pending investigations.
Five of his co-accused in the hijacking case – including Sharif's former chief advisor, Ghous Ali Shah, former Pakistan International Airlines Chairman Shahid Khakan Abbasi and former Anti-corruption Bureau Chief Saifur Rehman -- were also acquitted but remained in NAB custody. Sharif lost his appeal against his life sentence for hijacking but a similar verdict for terrorism was overtrned. Bureau Report