PHC suspends 14 years sentence
PESHAWAR: The PHC on Monday suspended 14 years sentence to a man convicted on terrorism charges and ordered his release on bail.
A single bench of Justice Mussarat Hilali suspended the conviction and transferred the case to District and Sessions Judge, Khyber district for deciding it. During hearing, Tafseel Khan Afridi, counsel for the petitioner, submitted that Assistant Political Agent (now AC), Bara, Khyber district had awarded 14 years sentence to Akhtar Wali, several years ago under the FCR and fine of Rs20,000 on charges of having links with a banned militant organisation. The lawyer said that there was no solid evidence against the convict and he was innocent as political administration convicted him without proof under the FCR, which has been abolished after merger of tribal districts with Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.
-
ChatGPT Caricature Prompts Are Going Viral. Here’s List You Must Try -
James Pearce Jr. Arrested In Florida After Alleged Domestic Dispute, Falcons Respond -
Cavaliers Vs Kings: James Harden Shines Late In Cleveland Debut Win -
2026 Winter Olympics Snowboarding: Su Yiming Wins Bronze And Completes Medal Set -
Trump Hosts Honduran President Nasry Asfura At Mar-a-Lago To Discuss Trade, Security -
Cuba-Canada Travel Advisory Raises Concerns As Visitor Numbers Decline -
Anthropic Buys 'Super Bowl' Ads To Slam OpenAI’s ChatGPT Ad Strategy -
Prevent Cancer With These Simple Lifestyle Changes -
Air Canada Flight Diverted St John's With 368 Passengers After Onboard Incident -
Experts Reveal Keto Diet As Key To Treating Depression -
Inter Miami Vs Barcelona SC Recap As Messi Shines With Goal And Assist -
David Beckham Pays Tribute To Estranged Son Brooklyn Amid Ongoing Family Rift -
Jailton Almeida Speaks Out After UFC Controversy And Short Notice Fight Booking -
Extreme Cold Warning Issued As Blizzard Hits Southern Ontario Including Toronto -
Lana Del Rey Announces New Single Co-written With Husband Jeremy Dufrene -
Ukraine-Russia Talks Heat Up As Zelenskyy Warns Of US Pressure Before Elections