No respite : Cuffs slapped on Ziaullah Afridi yet again

Sent on remand for a day after PHC accepted his bail plea


Noorwali Shah August 25, 2015
Ziaullah Afridi. PHOTO: FILE

PESHAWAR:


They may say freedom is only a state of mind but it is certainly not true in the case of Ziaullah Afridi. Within 24 hours of getting his bail plea accepted by the Peshawar High Court, the former mines and minerals minister was remanded by the Ehtesab Commission court in two other mining scams.


A large number of his supporters were anxiously waiting to see their leader outside the Ehtesab Court situated in Phase VII, Hayatabad. They later went to the EC office where bad news was awaiting them. Due to the large crowds, he was not produced before the court and remained put in the EC lockup.

The court of judge Subhan Sher ordered the shifting of Ziaullah to Central Prison Peshawar in the Tangi chromite and Abbottabad mining cases.

Additional Deputy Prosecutor Qazi Babar Irshad informed the court the PHC had accepted the bail application of the accused in the initial Nowshera illegal mining case. He said two other cases were also registered against Ziaullah and the high court did not mention them in the bail orders. Irshad said Ziaullah’s release in light of the remaining two cases is hence illegal. Upon hearing the arguments, the court ordered Ziaullah be shifted to the prison on judicial remand.

Free to go

On Monday, a division bench of Justice Musarat Hilali and Justice Younis Thaheem ordered the former minister’s release against one Rs2 million surety bond and two personal bonds.

Ziaullah was represented by a panel of lawyers who termed the extension of remand in the Tangi and Abbottabad cases illegal because the accused had already served the required physical custody period of 45 days, as mentioned in the Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa Ehtesab Commission (Amendment) Act 2015.

Undue favours

“The accused, as mines and mineral minister, used his position to influence the members of the mining committee to process and give favours in the renewal and assignment of Tangi chromite mines from Muhammad Ayaz to Jalal Khattak against the Concession Rules 2005,” a statement issued by the commission said about the second case.

It also stated that the mines were supposed to be auctioned instead of the contract being renewed. The total loss to the provincial exchequer was estimated at Rs3 billion.

The third case registered against the former minister pertains to his alleged involvement in the awarding of mining contracts in Abbottabad.

Ziaullah was arrested on July 9 for misappropriation of billions of rupees through illegal mining. Later, EC registered two other cases against him,. The cases include charges of misuse of power, illegal appointments and extending undue favours in granting mining contracts.

Published in The Express Tribune, August 26th, 2015. 

COMMENTS (1)

Javed Ali | 8 years ago | Reply Well done ehtesab commission and all done pti
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