Court declines bail to Pakistan ex-PM Imran Khan in cipher case - GulfToday

Court declines bail to Pakistan ex-PM Imran Khan in cipher case

Imran1-voteofnotrust

Imran Khan. File photo

Tariq Butt, Correspondent

The Islamabad High Court (IHC) on Friday rejected former prime minister and Pakistan Tehrik-e-Insaf (PTI) chairman Imran Khan’s petition seeking post-arrest bail in the cipher case.

IHC Chief Justice Aamer Farooq pronounced the reserved verdict, rejecting the former premier’s pleas seeking post-arrest bail and the quashing of the case.

The verdict declared both petitions as “without merit” and were “accordingly dismissed.” “It is clarified that any observations [made in this judgment] are tentative in nature and shall not prejudice learned trial court during the trial,” the decision said.

Lawyer Naeem Panjutha said the Islamabad High Court declined Imran Khan's application for bail and for the case to be dismissed. "We will challenge it," he said in a post on the social media platform X, formerly known as Twitter.

On the matter of the plea seeking dismissal of the case, it stated that the petitioner had the “efficacious and alternate remedy by way of moving an appropriate application” under section 249-A (power of magistrate to acquit accused at any stage) of the Code of Criminal Procedure (CPC).

“Moreover, the petitioner is co-accused in the case and even if the arguments advanced for quashing of FIR on his behalf are accepted, FIR cannot be quashed in as much as there are other co-accused and there cannot be a partial quashing of FIR,” the verdict said referring to the fact that the FIR had named multiple people named.

Referring to a previous Supreme Court verdict, the IHC said it showed that “contents of the cipher were such that they only called for demarche and not any further strict action, as there was no conspiracy of any kind.”

Addressing the arguments made in the pleas, the judgment said Imran, “when addressing the public gathering, was not doing so pursuant to the performance of his duties as prime minister, rather it was a political engagement”.

Noting that the punishment for the offence committed under section 5(1)(a) (wrongful communication, etc of information) of the Official Secrets Act was “death or imprisonment up to fourteen years”, the IHC said it attracted the prohibitory clause of section 497 (when bail may be taken in ease of non-bailable offence) of the CPC and “there does not exist any ground for further inquiry”.

The IHC stated, “The case law cited by the petitioner for grant of bail in the facts and circumstances is not relevant in as much as undoubtedly the evidence is all documentary but according to the prosecution, the copy of cipher is still in custody of the petitioner and where allegations are serious and prima facie link the accused with the commission of the offence, bail is to be denied in case of Official Secrets Act, 1923.”



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