Zardari, Talpur to appear before court today

NAB prosecutor to submit response to acquittal applications of Anwar Majeed’s sons

Former president Asif Ali Zardari and his sister Faryal Talpur. PHOTO: APP

ISLAMABAD:
Pakistan Peoples Party Co-chairman Asif Ali Zardari and his sister Faryal Talpur will be produced before an accountability court in Islamabad on Monday (today) in the money laundering and fake accounts case.

Accountability Court II Judge Arshad Malik will hear the case.

Namar Majeed, Zulqarnain Majeed and Ali Kamal Majeed, sons of Omni Group’s Anwar Majeed, had filed applications at the previous hearing seeking their acquittal maintaining that they had no connection with the case.

The National Accountability Bureau (NAB) prosecutor had requested time for submitting his reply.

At the last hearing, the court had extended Zardari’s physical remand in NAB custody till July 8.

However, NAB officials did not produce two co-accused in the case, Hussain Lawai and Taha Raza, before the court.

Their lawyer expressed concerns over why they were not brought to the court despite being in NAB custody. He pointed out that his clients were neither being allowed access to their legal team, nor permitted to meet their families. The lawyer feared that they could have been killed in custody.

Besides Zardari, NAB officials also brought co-accused Abdul Ghani Majeed of Omni Group to the court.

The former president asked Abdul Ghani to sit next to him in the courtroom.

At one point, Zardari asked the court to have the handcuffs of the co-accused removed, saying that the case pertained to while-collar crime.


“These are all educated people and there is no need to handcuff them,” he added.

On the judge’s query, Zardari said Omni Group’s Anwar Majeed, Abdul Ghani’s father and a co-accused in the case, was neither a robber nor an enemy of the state. “Anwar Majeed is 70 years old and his heart works at only 30%,” he added.

“NAB official picked him [Anwar Majeed] up at night from a hospital. When he was taken to the airport, his condition deteriorated and he had to be taken to a hospital again. Then they arrested his son Abdul Ghani.

Zardari told the court that the accused in the case were not anti-state elements and did not deserve the treatment being meted out to them.

Abdul Ghani requested the court to order the provision of medical facilities to him.

The judge responded that everyone arrested by NAB usually fell sick. “Should the NAB headquarters be shifted to a hospital?” he remarked.

Zardari said they were not weak and not among those who were scared easily. “I have spent 13 years in solitary confinement,” he added.

The judge noted that some people had the courage to take on a lion with bare hands while others were even afraid of small animals.

The former president replied that even a lizard was enough to scare the prime minister.

Zardari and others are being investigated in cases related to money laundering through fictitious bank accounts.
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