IHC nullifies special court verdict, orders re-investigation into Musharraf treason case

Special court’s order was challenged by former PM Shaukat Aziz, former CJP Abdul Hameed Dogar and Zahid Hamid


Rizwan Shahzad November 10, 2015
Former president Pervez Musharraf. PHOTO: AFP

ISLAMABAD: The Islamabad High Court (IHC) set aside on Tuesday a special court’s order last year that called on the federal government to include more names as abettors in former military ruler Gen (retd) Pervez Musharraf’s act of imposing emergency in November 2007.

A division bench of the IHC, comprising Justice Noorul Haq Qureshi and Justice Aamer Farooq, ordered reinvestigation in the treason case against Musharraf in light of the federal government’s earlier proposal to reinvestigate the matter.

The special court’s November 21, 2014 order was challenged through petitions filed by former premier Shaukat Aziz, former Supreme Court chief justice Abdul Hameed Dogar and former law minister Zahid Hamid.

The IHC had reserved its verdict in the Musharraf treason case last month after the three petitioners had challenged the special court’s verdict.

Musharraf treason case: Verdict reserved on petitions challenging special court order

Further, the court dismissed a petition filed by the former president of the High Court Bar Association of Rawalpindi, Taufiq Asif, saying the petitioner had no locus standi (the right or capacity to bring an action or to appear in a court) in the case.

Later, addressing the media outside the court, Chaudhry Faisal, one of Musharraf’s counsels, maintained that in the light of the court’s verdict, the former president will now be reinvestigated in the treason case.

In May this year, the federal government had also challenged the special court’s order saying the order was ‘patently illegal’ as the court had no jurisdiction for impleading names of co-accused, especially since the prosecution had completed its evidence.

Musharraf treason case: Government willing to investigate abettors

In June 2013, an anti-terrorism court had indicted Musharraf in the judges’ detention case. According to the charge sheet, the military ruler had imposed a state of emergency and detained the judges.

COMMENTS (5)

N K Ali | 9 years ago | Reply When the niyat is bad, the results will be dirty. Nawaz should be grateful he was not kept permanently in jail and got released by the Saudis. Re-investigation of the case is a 'sine qua non' because the basis on which the case case got framed against Musharraf was. In itself based on a faulty premise. Salads
Khan Irshad | 9 years ago | Reply It is sad that Pervez Musharaf a patriot, a General who risked his life defending the country and who is not involved in one cent corruption is being tried for treason while politicians convicted of money laundering and corruption are at the helm.
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