Pakistan challenges Sindh High Court decision lifting Musharraf’s travel ban

June 14, 2014 07:15 pm | Updated April 17, 2017 06:37 pm IST - Islamabad

Farogh Naseem, lawyer of Pakistan's former President Pervez Musharraf, speaks to reporters outside a court in Karachi, Pakistan on Thursday.

Farogh Naseem, lawyer of Pakistan's former President Pervez Musharraf, speaks to reporters outside a court in Karachi, Pakistan on Thursday.

Pakistan government on Sunday filed an appeal in the Supreme Court against a High Court decision to lift travel ban slapped on former President Pervez Musharraf last year.

Attorney General Salman Aslam Butt filed the appeal against the ruling of the Sindh High Court ordering the government to lift the travel ban on 70-year-old Mr. Musharraf.

A two-judge bench of the Sindh High Court comprising Justices Mohammad Ali Mazhar and Shahnawaz had issued a brief ruling on Thursday directing the Nawaz Sharif government to remove Mr. Musharraf’s name from the Exit Control List (ECL).

The High Court had given 15 days to file an appeal against its decision.

In its appeal, the government requested the apex court not to allow the removal of Mr. Musharraf’s name from the ECL, which deals with the restriction imposed on foreign trips of an individual.

It said that if Mr. Musharraf was allowed to leave the country, he may never come back to face the treason trial.

Mr. Musharraf, who returned to Pakistan in March last year ahead of the general elections ending his over four-year self-imposed exile, has faced multiple trials including one under the high-treason act for which he was placed under house arrest and barred from travelling abroad.

He had filed a petition in the high court to remove his name from the ECL so that he can visit his ailing mother in the UAE.

Mr. Musharraf, the first military ruler in Pakistan’s history to be tried in court, has rejected all the charges levelled against him, including treason.

If convicted, he can get death penalty. His trial had put the civilian leadership at odds with the military.

Mr. Musharraf ruled from 1999 to 2008 when he was forced to quit.

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