Nawaz Sharif Deported To Saudi Arabia An Eye On Past

DashingPun

MPA (400+ posts)
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Source
http://www.guardian.co.uk/news/gallery/2007/sep/10/internationalnews#/?picture=330708348&index=2
 

Night_Hawk

Siasat.pk - Blogger
Date is 100%correct brother why to edit post:)

Is this 100% Correct.
10September 2010 Nawaz Sharif Arrived in Pakistan After Supreme Court of Pakistan Decision that He is Citizen of Pakistan And No Agreement can Force him from his arrival to Pakistan,But things happened opposite to Supreme Court Of Pakistan Order,He was Deported Back To Saudi Arabia.

I believe the date is wrong, this should be corrected.
 

DashingPun

MPA (400+ posts)
The former Pakistani prime minister Nawaz Sharif was arrested and deported to Saudi Arabia within hours of arriving at Islamabad airport today.The airport drama was a major blow to Mr Sharif's campaign to oust the current president, General Pervez Musharraf, who deposed him in a 1999 coup and sent him into exile one year later.
But the deportation will stoke public anger at Gen Musharraf's increasingly authoritarian rule, and could trigger a fresh confrontation with the judiciary. Clashes have been reported between Sharif supporters and police in Islamabad, Rawalpindi and Attock.
Mr Sharif's party vowed to launch an immediate appeal before the supreme court, which only two and a half weeks ago ruled that Mr Sharif had an "inalienable" right of return to Pakistan.
In the event, Mr Sharif spent less than four hours on Pakistani soil. Dozens of police commandos surrounded his Pakistan International Airlines flight after it arrived from London at 8.45am (0445 BST).
Earlier the authorities thwarted efforts by his supporters to reach the airport by sealing off roads, jamming mobile phone signals and arresting hundreds of people.
A tense standoff started as Mr Sharif refused to hand his passport to an immigration official who boarded the plane. A helicopter waited outside, its rotors turning.
Ninety minutes later he was moved to a VIP lounge, accompanied by about 30 mostly foreign reporters, where a government's anti-corruption investigator showed him a charge sheet, fuelling speculation that he was about to be arrested.
The charges included an accusation that Mr Sharif pocketed $21.2m (10.4m) from the sale of a sugar mill business during his last term in offiice.
But Mr Sharif refused to sign the papers. Shortly afterwards he was hustled into a bus that took him to the helicopter, and then into a waiting plane.
Officials in Saudi Arabia told Reuters that Mr Sharif was expected to arrive in the Red Sea city of Jeddah later this afternoon.
The deportation solves one problem for Gen Musharraf, who is battling to retain power in the face of swelling civilian opposition, but it may create many more.
Legal experts said the deportation appeared to contravene the August 23 supreme court ruling allowing Mr Sharif to return home. Gen Musharraf has been at loggerheads with the court since March when he unsuccessfully tried to sack the chief justice, Muhammad Iftikhar Chaudhry.
Mr Sharif's Pakistan Muslim League - Nawaz (PML-N) party vowed to launch an appeal to the court by tomorrow, said Muhammad Iqbal, son of s***esman Ahsan Iqbal, who was arrested on his way to the airport.
On Sunday Mr Iqbal told a press conference: "The government's knees are shaking ... General Musharraf is already defeated." But today defiance gave way to disarray as the military-led government clamped down hard on the party.
"The situation is really messed up," said his son. "The majority of our leadership have been arrested. Our central secretariat was raided, the staff are gone and our phone lines have been cut."
A former president of Pakistan, Rafiq Tarar, was among Sharif loyalists who said they had been roughed up before being taken into police custody.
Now the mantle of leadership falls to Mr Sharif's younger brother, Shahbaz, who bade him a tearful farewell at Heathrow airport yesterday.
"This will be counted as the blackest day in Pakistan's history," Shahbaz told Geo television from London. "I do not have words to describe my grief."
Before his arrest Mr Sharif acknowledged that his return was a "risky course". But his aim was to "take Pakistan back to the rule of democracy", he told reporters on the plane. "Because unless we have this, we will continue to be in a state of mess, as we are today.
Source
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2007/sep/10/pakistan.declanwalsh2
 
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