Close X
Wednesday, November 13, 2024
ADVT 
International

Raheel Sharif Helped Me Leave Pakistan, Says Pervez Musharraf

IANS, 20 Dec, 2016 12:11 PM
    Former Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf has said Pakistan army's ex- chief General Raheel Sharif's intervention helped him in exiting Pakistan, indicating the powerful influence wielded by the military in the country's affairs.
     
    Participating in a talk show on Dunya News last night, Mr Musharraf said Mr Sharif helped him leave the country by keeping the government from pressuring the courts.
     
    "Well he (Raheel Sharif) did help me. I have been his boss and I have been the Army Chief before him. He helped out, because the cases are politicised, they put me on the Exit Control List (ECL), they turned it into a political issue," he said.
    When asked to explain, Mr Musharraf, 73, said Mr Sharif played a role in "releasing the pressure" on courts to prevent him from leaving the country.
     
    The statement came weeks after Raheel Sharif retired in November after completing his three-year tenure. He was succeeded by Qamar Javed Bajwa.
     
    Mr Musharraf said, "Behind the scenes, the army chief had a role to release that pressure by dealing with the government."
     
    "Once he (Sharif) got the government to relieve the pressure that they were exerting, the courts gave their judgement and allowed me to go abroad for treatment."
     
    Mr Musharraf alleged that Pakistani courts give decisions under pressure "behind the scenes" and this pressure was relieved by Mr Sharif with an "influencing" role.
     
    Mr Musharraf was able to fly out of Pakistan in March this year after the interior ministry issued a notification to remove his name from the ECL, following the Pakistani Supreme Court's order to lift the ban on his foreign travel.
     
    But the order from the court had also said that the federal government or the three-judge special court trying the retired general for treason was free to make decisions to regulate his custody or restrict his movement.
     
    Mr Musharraf is facing treason charges in Pakistan for imposing emergency rule in November 2007, arresting judges and limiting their powers. Besides, he is also being tried in murder cases of former Pakistan prime minister Benazir Bhutto, Baloch leader Nawab Akbar Bugti and Ghazi Abdul Rasheed, who was killed during the operation on Lal Masjid in Islamabad which was carried out on the orders of Mr Musharraf.
     
    Earlier this year, in a separate interview to The Atlantic in Washington DC, Mr Musharraf had said that Pakistani social fabric was not conducive for democracy.
     
    "Army has always had a role since our independence. Army has played a prominent role in the governance of Pakistan, partially, because, or mainly because of mis-governance by all of the so-called democratically elected governments," the former Pakistani President said

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Despite Setbacks, Indians Keep Australian Dream Alive

    Despite Setbacks, Indians Keep Australian Dream Alive
      The Indian community in Australia is growing rapidly. The increase in numbers is complemented by an increase in the average income of the Indian diaspora settled down under.

    Despite Setbacks, Indians Keep Australian Dream Alive

    Hillary Clinton's Quebec Ancestry Dates Back To New France

    MONTREAL — If Hillary Clinton wins Tuesday's election, Canada's relationship with the White House could soon be cast as a family affair, thanks to the presidential candidate's well-documented French-Canadian ancestry.

    Hillary Clinton's Quebec Ancestry Dates Back To New France

    Healthy Indo-Australian Engineer Supreet Kaur, 27, Dies After Complaining Of 'Crippling' Headaches

    Healthy Indo-Australian Engineer Supreet Kaur, 27, Dies After Complaining Of 'Crippling' Headaches
    Supreet Kaur - who was visiting her family in Perth - was ordered to undergo a crucial CT scan but staff at Fiona Stanley Hospital allegedly ignored her doctor's referral, The West Australian reported.

    Healthy Indo-Australian Engineer Supreet Kaur, 27, Dies After Complaining Of 'Crippling' Headaches

    Barack Obama Shouts At Supporters, Defends Man Backing Donald Trump

    Barack Obama Shouts At Supporters, Defends Man Backing Donald Trump
    Obama repeatedly told the crowd to "hold up" as Hillary Clinton's supporters started booing a man who stood up with the sign supporting the Republican presidential nominee.

    Barack Obama Shouts At Supporters, Defends Man Backing Donald Trump

    Indian National Sentenced For Slashing Ex-Wife's Throat In Singapore

    Indian National Sentenced For Slashing Ex-Wife's Throat In Singapore
    Krishnan Karunakaran had slashed throat of his 38-year-old wife Boomichelvi Ramasamy in October 2013 after she rebuffed his demands to help him stay in Singapore by getting his visa extended and not let him see their one-year-old daughter.

    Indian National Sentenced For Slashing Ex-Wife's Throat In Singapore

    This Little Boy’s Heartwarming Description Of His Vacation In Pakistan Is Extremely Moving

    This Little Boy’s Heartwarming Description Of His Vacation In Pakistan Is Extremely Moving
    This little boy explained how he used to travel to Hyderabad with his mother almost every other summer.

    This Little Boy’s Heartwarming Description Of His Vacation In Pakistan Is Extremely Moving