Explain Hafiz Saeed's detention: Pak court to government
March 28, 2017  18:23
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A Pakistani court has asked the Punjab government to explain under what authority it has detained Jamaat-ud-Dawah chief Hafiz Saeed "without a trial".
A Lahore high court's two-judge bench headed by Justice Syed Kazim Raza Shamsi was hearing a petition of Saeed, his aides -- Prof Malik Zafar Iqbal, Abdur Rehman Abid, Qazi Kashif Hussain and Abdullah Ubaid -- who had challenged their detention under the anti-terrorism law.
After hearing the arguments of advocate AK Dogar, counsel for Saeed, Justice Shamsi observed the government should tell about its powers to detain a citizen like Saeed without trial.
Referring to an Indian movie wherein Saeed was portrayed as a villain, the judge said the government should see if there is any "international conspiracy" against Pakistani citizens.
Dogar concluded his arguments saying the government had detained the JuD leaders without any justification.
Dogar also questioned the powers of the provincial government to include any citizen in the fourth schedule of the Anti-Terrorism Act. He said such powers were solely vested with the federal government.
He said the government had detained him (Saeed) and others to please India and the US.
He further argued that the UN resolution followed by the government action did not seek detention of any citizen. He said the detention of the JuD leaders is a case of mala fide intention and ulterior motive on part of the government.
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