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Pakistan ex-PM Nawaz Sharif given 10-year jail term | |
(35 minutes later) | |
A Pakistani court has sentenced former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif to 10 years in prison on corruption charges related to four luxury London flats. | A Pakistani court has sentenced former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif to 10 years in prison on corruption charges related to four luxury London flats. |
The National Accountability Bureau (NAB) court handed down the verdict after a series of delays. | The National Accountability Bureau (NAB) court handed down the verdict after a series of delays. |
His daughter, Maryam Nawaz Sharif, received a seven-year sentence, while his son-in-law, Safdar Awan, was given a one-year sentence. | |
Nawaz Sharif has said the charges are politically motivated. | |
Both he and his daughter are in London, where Sharif's wife, Kulsoom Nawaz, is receiving treatment for cancer. | |
Judge Mohammad Bashir ordered Sharif to serve 10 years for owning assets beyond income and one year for not co-operating with the NAB. He will serve his sentences concurrently. | |
Daughter Maryam received seven years for abetting a crime and one year for not co-operating - again to run concurrently - while Safdar Awan's sentence is for not co-operating. | |
Sharif and Maryam also received fines of £8m ($10.6m) and £2m respectively. | |
The case, known as the Avenfield Reference, relates to a number of properties in the UK capital. | |
The Panama Papers leak in 2015 revealed several of Sharif's children had links to offshore companies, which were allegedly used to channel funds and buy foreign assets - including luxury flats in Avenfield House, on London's Park Lane. | |
His family, however, insist they legitimately acquired the four properties. | |
As part of the ruling, the court ordered they be confiscated for the federal government. | |
Members of the Pakistani media set up outside the Avenfield House properties, where the family reportedly watched the verdict: | |
The UK has no formal extradition treaty with Pakistan, but Section 194 of the Extradition Act 2003 allows special extradition arrangements in exceptional circumstances. | |
Fearing unrest, the authorities reportedly closed roads around the Federal Judicial Complex in Islamabad and imposed a ban on public assemblies or rallies in the area. | |
The court repeatedly delayed the decision, initially pushing the ruling back after Friday prayers and then several times again, sparking speculation about the wait. | |
However, the judge reportedly said part of the delay was because of the need to photocopy the judgement - which is more than 100 pages long - for both the defence and the prosecution. | |
On Twitter, the hashtag #AvenfieldReference became one of the highest worldwide trends as Pakistanis awaited the verdict. | |
The ruling comes just a few weeks before Pakistan's general election on 25 July. Sharif is disqualified from standing for his centre-right party, the PML-N. | |
His brother Shahbaz Sharif now heads the PML-N, and is running in the July vote. | |
Shahbaz Sharif defended his brother at a press conference following the verdict, calling it "politically motivated" and saying the election in July would serve as a people's court that would condemn the decision. | |
The country's Supreme Court ousted Nawaz Sharif from the premiership in July 2017 following the Panama Papers revelations. | |
At the time, he was less than a year away from becoming the first head of government in Pakistani history to complete a full term in office. | |
Sharif held the office from November 1990 to July 1993 and from February 1997 until he was toppled in a bloodless coup in October 1999. |