Pakistan court ‘inches’ from solution to graft showdown

Pakistan court ‘inches’ from solution to graft showdown
Updated 06 October 2012
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Pakistan court ‘inches’ from solution to graft showdown

Pakistan court ‘inches’ from solution to graft showdown

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s top court yesterday gave the government more time to meet its demands about corruption allegations against the president, indicating that a solution to a nearly three-year showdown was imminent.
Since December 2009, the Supreme Court has insisted that the government re-open multi-million-dollar graft cases against Asif Ali Zardari in Switzerland that were frozen when he became head of state in 2008.
Earlier this year it convicted and dismissed Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani for refusing to ask Switzerland to re-open the cases, but the government appeared to back down last month by agreeing to write a letter.
“We are inches away from a perfect solution, which upholds the dignity of the court and takes care of any other concerns,” Judge Asif Saeed Khosa told the court.
He gave the government until Oct. 10 to consult Prime Minister Raja Pervez Ashraf and amend a paragraph of a still unpublished draft letter that the court had deemed objectionable and threatened fresh contempt proceedings over.
“This opportunity should not be allowed to go waste if we are so close to a solution,” said Khosa.
The government has long argued that it could not ask the Swiss to reopen the cases as the president has immunity from prosecution as head of state.
Separately, Pakistani police said yesterday that seven suspects from a feared Al-Qaeda-linked group had been arrested for allegedly plotting to attack school buses and prisons in Karachi.
“We have arrested seven men and recovered seven explosive-filled jackets, rockets and detonators,” senior police official Aslam Khan told reporters.
“They were planning to hit school vans in Karachi to create anarchy and then attack prisons to get their comrades freed,” he added.
Police arrested the men yesterday in the western neighborhood of Manghopir and Khan said they were members of banned sectarian group Lashkar-e-Jhangvi.
Karachi is Pakistan’s largest city with an estimated population of 18 million. Its Arabian Sea port is used by the United States and NATO to ship supplies to the war in neighboring, landlocked Afghanistan.