Affidavits of Musharraf, five others submitted in Masood Janjua case

Court adjourns case for three weeks, seeks affidavits of remaining officers.

Progress in the missing person Masood Janjua case at the Supreme Court. PHOTO:AFP/FILE

ISLAMABAD:
General (retd) Pervez Musharraf along with six others submitted their affidavits before the Supreme Court on Monday in the disappearance of Masood Ahmad Janjua.  

Additional Attorney General Tariq Khokhar submitted a total of seven affidavits before the Supreme Court, including that of former Attorney General Malik Abdil Qayoom, former Interior Secretary  Syed Kamal Shah, former Director General National Crisis Management Cell Brigadier Javed Iqbal Cheema and former Secretary Defence Syed Athar Ali Abbas.

The three-member bench headed by Justice Jawwad S Khawaja rejected the affidavit of former Defence Secretary Syed Athar Ali Abbas, directing him to re-submit fresh documents before the next hearing.

While most of the affidavits were presented openly, those of Col (retd) Jehangir Akhtar and Brig (retd) Mansoor Saeed were presented in sealed envelops.

Upon reviewing the affidavits, the court rejected the pleas for confidentiality and made them public.


Assistant Director (Legal) Ministry of Defence Waseem Qureshi requested the court for additional time for the affidavits for four other officers implicated. Qureshi explained that the men were retired army officials and that the General Headquarters (GHQ) had to be consulted before their information could be provided.

The court adjourned the case for three weeks, noting that the bench would pass its orders after all 11 affidavits are filed.

In October 2013, the Supreme Court had asked the deputy attorney general to submit affidavits of six out of the eleven army officers through the Ministry of Defence in the case of Amina Masood Janjua, who had alleged that the listed officers knew the whereabouts of her husband Masood Ahmad Janjua.

The deputy attorney-general had informed the court that five of the officers had already submitted their affidavits and are waiting for the remaining officers named in the petition to file theirs.

Then Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry, who was heading the three-member bench of the apex court, had said that “the case is sensitive and we will hear it once the affidavits of all the accused officers, duly attested by the defence ministry, are submitted.”

The court had then asked for the affidavits to be submitted within ten days.
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