NAB’s Toshakhana reference against Asif Ali Zardari, Yousuf Raza Gilani, Nawaz Sharif sent back
An accountability court in Islamabad sent back the NAB's Toshakhana Reference against Zardari, Yousuf Raza Gilani and Nawaz Sharif
ISLAMABAD: An accountability court in Islamabad sent back the Toshakhana Reference filed by the National Accountability Bureau (NAB) against former president Asif Ali Zardari, ex-prime ministers Yousuf Raza Gilani and Nawaz Sharif.
The reference was sent back by judge Muhammad Bashir after the PPP and PML-N leaders applied to cancel the case because of recent amendments made to the NAB Ordinance.
The Toshakhana is a department which stores gifts given to Pakistani heads of state and premiers by other countries.
According to the gift depository rules, the presidents and prime ministers have to deposit any gifts they receive in the Toshakhana as they are the property of the state — unless sold at an open auction. The rules, however, do allow officials to retain gifts with a market value of less than Rs10,000 without paying anything.
In March 2020, NAB filed the Toshakhana Reference in an accountability court against the three political leaders.
Khawaja Anwar Majeed and Khawaja Abdul Ghani Majeed, the owners of the Omni Group, were also named as suspects in the reference.
According to the accountability bureau, former president Zardari and former premier Sharif obtained cars from the Toshakana by paying 15% of the price of the cars.
The bureau further alleged that former premier Gilani facilitated Zardari and Nawaz in this regard.
Sharif and Zardari are currently out on bail in other corruption cases against them.
The reference filed by NAB alleges that Zardari was gifted luxury cars by the governments of Libya and the United Arab Emirates, and he used them instead of submitting them to the Toshakhana.
The accountability watchdog claimed that former premier Nawaz was given a car from the Toshakhana by the PPP government in 2008 even though he did not hold any official position in the government.
NAB had requested the court to conduct a trial and sentence the accused to the strictest possible jail terms under the NAB Ordinance for their involvement in the corruption scam. In May of the same year, the accountability court issued arrest warrants for former prime minister Nawaz Sharif after no one appeared on his behalf to represent him. In September, of the same year, all three were declared proclaimed offenders in the case. And in October 2020, the court ordered the confiscation of the property owned by Nawaz after he was declared an absconder in the case.
-
Charlie Puth Explains Why He Went Against His Own Words About 'Hero' -
Popular Weight-loss Drugs Could Help Treat Addiction -
Brooklyn Beckham In ‘terrible Spot’ Like Prince Harry After Airing Family Drama -
A$AP Rocky Reveals Real Reason Behind Feud With Drake -
Stroke During Pregnancy Linked To Long-term Heart Problems -
Trump Backs Off European Tariffs Threat After Reaching ‘framework Of A Future Deal’ On Greenland With NATO -
South Korea Passes World’s First Comprehensive AI Law, Reshaping Global Regulation -
‘Disgraced’ Andrew’s New Demands Exposed As He Moves Out Of Royal Lodge -
Court Allows TikTok To Operate In Canada Pending Review -
Kyle Richards Lashes Out At Ashley Darby For Flirting With Ex Mauricio Umansky -
Chris Noth Breaks Silence On Fallout With Sarah Jessica Parker: 'We're Not Friends' -
Prince Harry, Meghan Markle Show Awkward Mismatch In Viral Video -
Madelyn Cline Surprises With Chic New Hairstyle -
Amelia Gray Gushes About Megan Trainor, Ben Platt -
Prince Harry On Moment Meghan Markle Made Him Feel Like A ‘teenager’ -
Zayn Malik Debuts Four Unreleased Songs At Vegas Residency Premiere