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    Sharif, sons fail to appear before anti-corruption body

    Ousted Pakistan prime minister Nawaz Sharif and his two sons failed to appear before the top anti-graft body, which wanted to interrogate them over money laundering and corruption charges revealed by the Panama Papers.

    Sharif, sons fail to appear before anti-corruption body
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    Ousted Pakistan prime minister Nawaz Sharif

    Lahore

    On July 28, a five-member Supreme Court bench disqualified Sharif from continuing in his office for possessing a work permit at the firm of his son in the UAE.

    The court also ordered the NAB to investigate money laundering and other corruption charges against Sharif, his children, son-in-law Safdar and federal finance minister Ishaq Dar, a relative of Sharif, in light of the report of the Joint Investigation Team.

    The National Accountability Bureau (NAB) following a Supreme Court order had issued summons to Sharif and his sons - Hussain and Hasan - to interrogate them at its Lahore office over their offshore properties revealed last year by the Panama Papers leak.

    A 10-member NAB team had reached Lahore from Rawalpindi to record the statements of the Sharifs, but they did not turn up before the office closed at 3 pm local time, a NAB official told PTI.

    "Sharif and his sons were supposed to join the investigation in Lahore office but we are informed by the office of Sharif that he is not coming. No reason has been given to us," the official said.

    He said the NAB would issue second summons to them in two weeks.

    A leader close to the Sharif family denied receiving any summons. "Nawaz Sharif and his sons had not yet received the NAB summons. Sharif will only decide whether or not to appear before the NAB after receiving the summons," Senator Pervaiz Rashid told PTI.

    But another leader of the ruling PML-N party said Sharif has decided not to join the investigation. He said Sharif will join the probe only after the Supreme Court decides his review petition against the court's verdict that disqualified him.

    The 67-year-old three-time prime minister has denied any wrongdoing. Last week, Sharif held a defiant roadshow with thousands of supporters from Islamabad to Lahore to project his political strength after the Supreme Court verdict.

    One of the three applications Sharif filed in the Supreme Court calls for staying "further implementation of the judgement till a decision on the review petition is taken".

    The apex court is likely to take up Sharif's review petition early next month after judges return from vacation.

    Sharif has expressed serious concerns on the NAB investigation, saying it was unprecedented for a Supreme Court judge to supervise NAB proceedings against him and his family members to get a "desired result".

    "Sharif has also been advised by some of his party members to boycott the NAB investigations. He would not get any relief as it has already been decided to grill him," the PML-N leader said on the condition of anonymity.

    The NAB said it will issue second summons to the Sharifs if they do not join the investigation after the first summons.

    The third and final summons will be issued next month if there is no compliance even after the second summons, it said.

    Sharif, his sons, daughter Maryam, son-in-law Safdar and relatives Ishaq Dar and Tariq Shafi - face several cases, including over the Al-Azizia Steel Mills, the Hill Metal Establishment and Hudabiya Papers Mills. 

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