Home TRENDING LHC TO HEAR BENAZIR MURDER APPEAL AFTER 5 YEARS 5

LHC TO HEAR BENAZIR MURDER APPEAL AFTER 5 YEARS 5

After a delay of five years, the LHC will hear the appeal in the Benazir assassination case.

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After a delay of five years, the LHC will hear the appeal in the Benazir assassination case.
The hearing has been scheduled for February 9 and notices have been sent to Zardari, Musharraf, and others.

RAWALPINDI: On Wednesday, the Lahore High Court (LHC) finally set a hearing date for the appeals in the murder case of former prime minister Benazir Bhutto, which had been pending for five and a half years.

Justices Sadaqat Ali Khan and Mirza Waqas Rauf were appointed to a special division bench by Chief Justice of the LHC Muhammad Ameer Bhatti. On February 9, the bench will hear eight appeals pertaining to this case (tomorrow).

Asif Zardari, co-chair of the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP), the late Gen. (ret.) Pervez Musharraf, the five accused, and the police officials who were found guilty of crimes received notices.

Musharraf was charged in the case, and an ongoing warrant is out for his permanent arrest. However, the appeal against him will probably be rejected after his passing.

Aitzaz, Sher Zaman, and Hasnain, three of the five accused, will testify in court; Abdul Rasheed is being held in Adiala Jail. Rafaqaat, the fifth defendant, is gone.

Saud Aziz and Khurram Shahzad, two police officers involved in the case, are free on bail. Both were given a 17-year prison term and a Rs. 1-million fine.

Unsolved puzzle

Benazir Bhutto was killed on December 27, 2007, after speaking at an election rally in Rawalpindi’s famed Liaquat Bagh. She was reportedly slain by a suicide bomber who was 15 years old.

The first female premier of a Muslim nation was assassinated fifteen years ago, and despite numerous national and international investigations, her trial is still a mystery. Her killers have not yet been brought to justice.

In the tumultuous history of the nation, one of the most significant high-profile cases is still unresolved at the LHC Rawalpindi bench.

In addition to the former premier, the attack also resulted in the deaths of over 20 party members and the critical injuries of another 71.

Four investigations into the high-profile case were carried out in the wake of the tragedy, with Scotland Yard, the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA), the United Nations (UN), and the police joint investigation team (JIT) all working to find answers.

However, as the Bhutto family chose not to pursue the matter in the special anti-terrorism court, all inquiries and investigations came up empty (ATC).

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