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CPEC funds case: Not seems good to bring Parliamentary matters to court, says IHC

By Obaid Abrar Khan
March 19, 2019

Ag AFP

ISLAMABAD: Islamabad High Court (IHC) Chief Justice Athar Minallah on Monday remarked that matters related to Parliament should be solved there instead of bringing them to the court.

Justice Athar Minallah on Monday reserved verdict on petition filed by PML-N MNA Mohsin Shahnawaz Ranjha against the government decision to give Rs24 billion from China Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) fund to the Parliamentarians.

During hearing, petitioner PML-N MNA Mohsin Shahnawaz Ranjha argued that government had diverted Rs24 billion from CPEC funds to parliamentarians.

To this, Justice Athar Minallah remarked, "You are a member of the National Assembly, you should approach the Parliament."

Justice Minallah further remarked that he could have obtained all the details through Dutch police arrest Turkish suspect after three shot dead on tram

UTRECHT, Netherlands: Dutch police on Monday arrested a Turkish-born suspect over a shooting on a tram in Utrecht that left three people dead in what officials said was a possible terror attack.

Police had earlier launched a huge manhunt for Gokmen Tanis, 37, issuing a picture of the suspected gunman and warning the public not to approach him following the attack, in which five other people were wounded.

Mosques and schools were closed across the Netherlands´ fourth-largest city following the bloodshed, before heavily armed officers surrounded a building and arrested him.

Dutch authorities said they were still investigating a likely terrorist motive for the shooting but Prime Minister Mark Rutte said they "cannot exclude" other motives, including a family dispute.

"We have just heard that the suspect we are looking for has been arrested," Utrecht police chief Rob van Bree told a dramatic press conference seconds after being handed a piece of paper with news of the arrest.

The city´s mayor Jan van Zanen told the same news conference it was a "black day for Utrecht”, while prosecution officer Rutger Jeuken said that “it looks like what we are dealing with is a terrorist motive”.

The drama began when gunfire broke out on a tram near the 24 Oktoberplein square, sending people fleeing from the tram and triggering a huge police response.

One witness told broadcaster NOS they saw an injured woman running out of the tram with blood on her hands and clothes who then fell to the ground.

“I brought her into my car and helped her. When the police arrived, she was unconscious,” the witness, who was not named, told the broadcaster.

A body covered in a white sheet could later be seen lying on the tram tracks.

Police then launched a massive manhunt during which the suspected gunman is believed to have carjacked a Renault Clio before being arrested about seven hours later, around three kilometres (two miles) from the attack site.

Security forces were on high alert at airports and other government buildings following the attack, which came just days after 50 people were killed at mosques in New Zealand in a rampage by an alleged white supremacist.

Dutch national counter-terrorism chief Pieter-Jaap Aalbersberg said authorities had lowered the terror threat in Utrecht one notch from the top level after “the arrest of the main suspect for the shooting”.

Rutte said afterwards that the Netherlands would “never give way to intolerance”.

“There are many questions and rumours,” he told a news conference in The Hague. “What the motive is, terrorist or other, we don´t yet know, but we can´t exclude anything.”

Ordering flags to be flown at half-mast on Wednesday, Rutte added that a “sense of horror and disbelief prevails over the terrible events of today.”

Provincial elections that will determine the make-up of the Dutch senate will still go ahead on Wednesday, Rutte said. Political parties halted campaigning on Monday because of the attack.

As the focus turned to the alleged attacker, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said his country´s intelligence agency was “looking into the matter”, without providing further detail.

“Some say it is a family matter, some say it is a terror attack ... Our intelligence agency is looking into the matter. I haven´t talked to our intelligence chief yet”, Erdogan told Ulke TV.

The suspect´s father, Mehmet Tanis, said his son “must be punished” if found responsible, Turkey´s DHA agency quoted him as saying.

He said he had lost contact with his son having returned to his homeland in 2008 after divorcing his wife, DHA reported. She remained in the Netherlands with Gokmen.

Dutch police said Gokmen Tanis was known to them while NOS reported that he was in court in a rape case two weeks ago. The Netherlands has been largely spared the kind of attacks which have rocked its closest European neighbours in the past few years, but there has been a series of recent scares.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo offered his sympathies over the attack as he addressed a business event in his home state of Kansas co-hosted with The Netherlands.