TheJakartaPost

Please Update your browser

Your browser is out of date, and may not be compatible with our website. A list of the most popular web browsers can be found below.
Just click on the icons to get to the download page.

Jakarta Post

Ex-PM Sharif heads to Pakistan to face jail before elections

Former Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif is returning to Pakistan and will be arrested upon landing on Friday evening.

Kamran Haider and Ismail Dilawar (Bloomberg)
Islamabad/Karachi
Fri, July 13, 2018

Share This Article

Change Size

Ex-PM Sharif heads to Pakistan to face jail before elections Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif looks out the window of his plane after attending a ceremony to inaugurate the M9 motorway between Karachi and Hyderabad, Pakistan Feb. 3, 2017. (Reuters/Caren Firouz)

F

ormer Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif is on route from London to Lahore and will be arrested upon landing on Friday evening ahead of a national vote that his party says has been manipulated.

Sharif and his daughter Maryam, who were handed 10-year and seven-year jail sentences respectively last week by an anti-corruption court, arrived in Abu Dhabi and will transfer onto Lahore. National Accountability Bureau teams have been assigned to arrest them when they arrive at the airport and they will be taken by helicopter to Islamabad, according to an official at the agency.

“He is convicted, so he has to be arrested first and can’t be allowed to roam around in the city,” caretaker Information Minister Syed Ali Zafar said in broadcast comments on Thursday.

The former ruling party headed by the ousted premier has accused security forces of arresting hundreds of loyalists in Lahore and placing the city on lock-down. Shuakat Javed, the caretaker home minister for the provincial government, told reporters that mobile phone services are suspended in areas due to terror threats and that 124 people were arrested, though none of them were electoral candidates or leaders. Police have placed shipping containers across the city to block roads to prevent protesters reaching the airport.

Sharif’s dramatic return before a July 25 election follows a two-year corruption scandal that engulfed Pakistani politics after the leak of the so-called Panama Papers showed his family used offshore accounts to buy high-end London apartments. The former premier was disqualified from the top job by the Supreme Court last July, his third ousting since the 1990s.

The Sharif family has consistently denied any wrong doing and has criticized the judiciary’s handling of his case. Sharif said the nation’s powerful military - which removed him in a 1999 coup - has conspired to manipulate the vote against his Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz party in favor of his main political rival Imran Khan.

The armed forces, which have directly ruled Pakistan for almost half of its existence, have repeatedly denied interfering in the election. Khan, a former national cricket captain, has also rubbished claims that he is a tool of the army’s alleged attempts to bring a pliant government to power.

Sharif’s homecoming is being seen as a potential turning point for the electoral prospects of his party, which has been losing ground to Khan’s Movement for Justice, according to a Gallup Pakistan survey published this month. The Sharif family has sought to portray themselves as victims of the military establishment.

“It’s a move to charge up his supporters,” said Umbareen Javaid, chairwoman of the political science department at Punjab University.

On Wednesday, Sharif told reporters in London that the military’s main spy agency has intimidated the PML-N’s election candidates and has told them to switch parties or run as independents. Sharif’s younger brother Shehbaz is leading rallies across Lahore to drum up support for the ex-prime minister’s arrival and said the arrest of party workers amounted to “naked pre-poll rigging.”

“This rally is illegal,” caretaker Punjab minister Javed said, adding that force can be used on political workers trying to get close to the airport. “We’re neutral and here to enforce law.”

Pakistan’s television regulator said on Thursday it was of “grave concern” that local channels were airing political press conferences “containing defamatory and derogatory content targeting various state institutions specifically judiciary and armed forces.”

A spate of violence has also marred the campaigning of smaller parties. Haroon Bilour, a key leader of the Awami National Party, was killed in a suicide bombing in the northwestern city of Peshawar this week, while Akram Khan Durrani of the Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal escaped a blast in northern Bannu on Friday.

“Strongly condemn the terrorist attack on Akram Durrani,” Imran Khan said on Twitter. “There seems to be a conspiracy to sabotage the 25 July elections but the people of Pakistan will not allow any design intended to target these historic elections to succeed.”

Your Opinion Matters

Share your experiences, suggestions, and any issues you've encountered on The Jakarta Post. We're here to listen.

Enter at least 30 characters
0 / 30

Thank You

Thank you for sharing your thoughts. We appreciate your feedback.