IHC rejects plea for probe into ‘letter’
ISLAMABAD: The Islamabad High Court (IHC) on Monday rejected a petition for placing the names of the former prime minister Imran Khan and former ministers on the Exit Control List (ECL), besides seeking investigation into the "threatening letter".
IHC Chief Justice Athar Minallah issued a five-page verdict against the plea, while slapping a Rs100,000 fine on the petitioner. The court had reserved its verdict on Haider's plea earlier in the day.
Maulvi Iqbal Haider had filed the petition after Khan left the Prime Minister's House as a result of a successful no-confidence vote against him Saturday night. At the outset of Monday’s hearing, IHC Chief Justice Athar Minallah asked the petitioner why he was politicising the issue?
"It is the state's responsibility [...] why did you reach out to the court?" Justice Minallah noted. Haider replied that he had filed a treason case against former president Pervez Musharraf and it was his plea on which the action had been taken against Musharraf.
At this, CJ Minallah remarked: "Imran Khan was an elected prime minister, don't compare him with Musharraf," asking him what Haider's request was? To this, Haider said that the controversy affected Pakistan's relationship with the US. He argued that the opposition parties had filed a no-confidence motion against then PM Imran Khan, on which Khan first remained silent and then showed a "threatening letter", claiming a conspiracy had been hatched against his government.
Later, the prime minister revealed that the threatening message was from US Assistant Secretary of State for the South and Central Asian Affairs Donald Lu. The US authorities rejected the letter, hence, the diplomatic cable should be investigated, pleaded the petitioner.
"Interior secretary is bound to get the matter probed. The federal government was responsible for investigating the cable and take the matter to international courts," he added. Haider contended that a high treason case should be built against Khan, former federal ministers, including Shah Mahmood Qureshi and Fawad Chaudhry, former deputy speaker Qasim Suri and former Pakistan envoy to US Asad Majeed, and sent to the trial court. Haider had maintained in the plea that the US blatantly denied sending the alleged cable, therefore, it must be investigated.
-
50 Cent Super Bowl Ad Goes Viral -
'The Housemaid' Lifts Company's Profits: Here's How -
Michael Douglas Recalls Director's Harsh Words Over 'Wall Street' Performance -
Henry Czerny On Steve Martin Created Humor On 'Pink Panther' Set -
Lady Victoria Hervey: Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor's Ex-girlfriend Proud Of Being On Epstein Files -
Dolly Parton Created One Of Her Iconic Tracks With Acrylic Nails? -
Parents Alarmed As Teens Form Emotional Bonds With AI Companion Chatbots -
Denzel Washington Surprises LeBron James -
Cillian Murphy's Hit Romantic Drama Exits Prime Video: Here's Why -
Paris Hilton Reveals What Keeps Her Going In Crazy Schedule -
Deep Freeze Returning To Northeastern United States This Weekend: 'Dangerous Conditions' -
Inside Dylan Efron's First 'awful' Date With Girlfriend Courtney King -
'Sugar' Season 2: Colin Farrell Explains What Lies Ahead After THAT Plot Twist -
‘Revolting’ Sarah Ferguson Crosses One Line That’s Sealed Her Fate As Well As Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s -
AI Rivalry Heats Up As Anthropic Targets OpenAI In Super Bowl Ad -
Kate Middleton, Prince William Share Message Ahead Of Major Clash