ADVERTISEMENTREMOVE AD

Al-Azizia Case: Ex-Pak PM Nawaz Sharif Re-files Bail Plea in HC

Nawaz Sharif moved the Islamabad High Court seeking bail on medical grounds in the Al-Azizia corruption case.

Published
story-hero-img
i
Aa
Aa
Small
Aa
Medium
Aa
Large
ADVERTISEMENTREMOVE AD

Pakistan's jailed former prime minister Nawaz Sharif on Monday, 20 May, moved the Islamabad High Court seeking bail on medical grounds in the Al-Azizia corruption case.

The Supreme Court earlier this month dismissed the three-time prime minister's review petition seeking permanent bail on medical grounds and the permission to go abroad for treatment.

Sharif returned to the Kot Lakhpat jail on 7 May to serve his seven-year prison term in the case after the end of his six-week bail, which was granted to him on medical grounds with a condition that he would not leave Pakistan.

Opinions of specialist doctors from Switzerland, US and UK have been included in the petition filed at the high court by Sharif's counsel Khawaja Haris, the Express Tribune reported.

"According to the medical board, Nawaz is suffering from numerous diseases," the petition said.

ADVERTISEMENTREMOVE AD

According to the reports, doctors recommended that Sharif's condition is life-threatening. Tension and stress can prove to be threatening to his life, it added.

Even Sharif's blood and sugar levels have not normalised, the petition said.

The petition stated that all members of the special medical board, along with doctors associated with doctors hospital Lahore, Sheikh Zayed Hospital Lahore and National Hospital Lahore as well as medical specialists from UK, USA and Switzerland were unanimous that Sharif's treatment is not possible in jail premises.

The former premier, who has been serving a seven-year prison term at Lahore's Kot Lakhpat Jail since 24 December 2018, was granted a six-week bail on 26 March to get medical treatment. However, Sharif filed a civil review petition against the order on 27 April.

The petition requested the court to allow Sharif get medical treatment abroad, claiming that the former prime minister was suffering from acute anxiety and depression that would lead to sudden death'.

It said the medical professionals seeing the former premier in Pakistan recommend that he should be treated by his regular practitioners in the United Kingdom. It also said that there was a difference between the apex court's 26 March oral order and the written order.

However, a three-judge special bench, headed by Pakistan Chief Justice Asif Saeed Khosa and comprising Justice Sajjad Ali Shah and Justice Yahya Afridi, dismissed the petition.

Sharif was convicted by an accountability court in one of the three corruption cases filed in the wake of the apex court's 28 July 2017 order in Panama Papers case.

Sharif and his family have denied any wrongdoing and allege that the corruption cases against them were politically motivated.

(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)

Speaking truth to power requires allies like you.
Become a Member
Read More
×
×