Advertisement

Ousted Premier of Pakistan Gets 3rd Prison Term

Share
From Associated Press

Already serving two life terms, deposed Premier Nawaz Sharif was sentenced again Saturday--this time to 14 years in prison for tax evasion.

The penalty, which included being barred from politics for 21 years, was handed down by a special anti-corruption court set up by the military rulers who toppled Sharif’s government.

Sharif, who received life sentences for convictions in hijacking and terrorism cases, has maintained that he’s innocent of all charges.

Advertisement

Sharif, who was ousted in October in a bloodless coup led by Gen. Pervez Musharraf, is appealing his two life convictions. If he’s successful, he would still face prison on the tax conviction.

Saturday’s conviction of Sharif--for failing to declare a helicopter on his tax forms--was seen as carrying out Musharraf’s promise to punish corruption at every level.

The special anti-corruption courts were set up by the military rulers who threw out Sharif’s government, accusing it of corruption and economic mismanagement.

“I was expecting the verdict,” a defiant Sharif said after the sentencing. “It is because of a personal vendetta that such a great injustice is being done to me.”

He accused Musharraf of crafting laws to keep him out of politics and in jail, and of waging a witch hunt against him and his family.

“Every law has been made to get rid of me,” he said. “This shows that Musharraf wants to single me out.”

Advertisement

He has sharply criticized the military government’s National Accountability Bureau and the law under which he was tried.

But the government’s prosecutor-general and author of the law, Farooq Adam, said Sharif’s trial was “free and fair.”

The military takeover in October was widely accepted in Pakistan because the army pledged to root out corruption and revive the economy.

Advertisement