Pak asks Swiss authorities to reopen Zardari’s graft case

March 31, 2010 04:13 pm | Updated November 17, 2021 07:02 am IST - ISLAMABAD

Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari. File photo: AP.

Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari. File photo: AP.

Under pressure from the Supreme Court, Pakistan has taken the unusual step of asking another government to reopen a criminal case against the president, a sign of the leader’s deepening rift with the judiciary.

Pakistan has sent a letter to Swiss authorities asking that they reopen a money-laundering case against Asif Ali Zardari after an amnesty protecting him from graft prosecution was struck down by the Supreme Court, a government lawyer said on Wednesday.

The move raises the prospect Mr. Zardari, who was elected president in 2008 after years of battling corruption allegations, could be investigated while in office and possibly convicted, greatly weakening his rule or ending it as the country battles al—Qaeda and the Taliban. He has denied any wrongdoing and insists he has immunity from prosecution because he is president.

Mr. Zardari and his late wife Benazir Bhutto were found guilty in absentia in a Geneva court in 2003 of laundering millions of Swiss francs (dollars). They were handed six-month sentences and fined, but both punishments were automatically suspended when they appealed.

Swiss authorities abandoned the case in 2008 after the Pakistani government asked them to. The case was among thousands dropped as a result of a controversial amnesty that was part of a power-sharing deal that allowed Bhutto to return from exile and contest elections.

The amnesty was scrapped in December by the Supreme Court, which is led by a judge whom Mr. Zardari supporters say is hostile to his rule.

On Wednesday, a lawyer for the government’s anti-corruption agency said that as a result of that ruling the agency had sent a letter to the Swiss attorney general asking that the probe be reopened.

The move follows a Supreme Court threat on Tuesday to imprison the head of the anti-corruption agency unless it moved to reopen that case against Mr. Zardari and a slew of others against politicians, bureaucrats and party workers.

Swiss Justice Ministry spokesman Folco Galli, said the ministry had yet to receive the Pakistani request.

Bhutto was killed in a December 2007 gun and suicide bomb attack, and Mr. Zardari designated her political successor. He became president after his party won parliamentary elections and forced military ruler Pervez Musharraf to resign.

He has struggled to make much of a dent in the country’s myriad problems, but his government has been praised of late in the West for battling the Taliban in north-western border regions.

The U.S. has pushed Islamabad to keep up its offensives, arguing that militants on its side of the border are involved in attacks on American and NATO troops in Afghanistan.

Earlier on Wednesday, six soldiers and 20 Taliban militants were killed when troops repulsed an attack by dozens of insurgents on a checkpoint close to the Afghan border, a statement from Pakistan’s paramilitary Frontier Corps said.

Also on Wednesday, the army used helicopter gunships and mortar fire to kill 15 militants in the Orakzai tribal region, where many Pakistani Taliban fighters are believed to be based, said local government official Samiullah Khan.

But one of the mortars accidentally hit a house, killing four civilians, said Mr. Khan.

Elsewhere in Pakistan’s volatile tribal area, at least six alleged insurgents were killed by suspected U.S. missiles in North Waziristan, two Pakistani intelligence officials said.

Two missile attacks one hour apart destroyed an abandoned school near the town of Mir Ali, said the officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.

The U.S. rarely discusses its missile campaign. Pakistan publicly protests it as a violation of its sovereignty, though it is believed to secretly assist in the strikes.

North Waziristan has been the target of the majority of recent missile attacks. It is home to several militant groups who focus on battling U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan.

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