Shah’s arrest has raised the charge of political victimisation from the PPP leaders, including party chairman Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, who accused the government of using NAB to “hide its own failures”. Bilawal also described the arrest as an attempt by the government to sabotage the unity among political parties over Kashmir and to divert attention from its “failure” over the matter. Bilawal may well be saying what he is supposed to say in such a situation. But there is little denying that if not all, most of those in NAB custody or under NAB investigation belong to the main opposition parties – the PML-N and the PPP. And this is what raises serious questions over the claims of an across-the-board accountability. The opposition-only list of those nabbed has even drawn concerns from the Chief Justice of Pakistan, who has recently warned against the growing perception about a “lopsided process of accountability” and called for urgent remedial measures to save it from losing credibility.
Published in The Express Tribune, September 20th, 2019.
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