Pakistan People's Party (PPP) leader Asma Arbab Alamgir on Monday moved Peshawar High Court (PHC) against the federal government over not removing her name from the Exit Control List (ECL). Asma Arbab Alamgir filed contempt of court petition against the federal government over failure to comply court orders for removing her name from the no-fly-list. The petition stated that the high court had directed to remove Ms Alamgir's name from the ECL, but the federal government fails to implement court directives. The petition sought contempt of court proceedings against the federal government in this regards.
While talking to media, Ms Alamgir claimed that the secretary interior is rejecting to follow judicial orders. She said that the government has placed her name in ECL illegally. She said that Peshawar High Court ordered the removal of her name from Exit Control list. She alleged that the secretary interior was not removing my name from ECL to appease Prime Minister Imran Khan. When the superior court orders were denied, then there was no government prevailed in the country, Asma Alamgir said, added that prime minister was removed due to disobeying orders of the superior judiciary in past. She said that government must accept orders of the superior court.
It is noteworthy to mention here that the PHC had directed the Ministry of Interior on April 24 to remove Asma Alamgir's name from ECL. The order was issued by a division bench comprising Justice Ikramullah Khan and Justice Musarrat Hilali after hearing a writ petition filed by PPP leader, who was an adviser to ex-prime minister Yousaf Raza Gilani, Asma Alamgir for challenging the presence of her name on ECL despite the expiry of one-year period.
An accountability court had indicted the couple once again after removing the part regarding foreign properties from the reference on February 12.
It is also pertinent to mention here that Asma Arbab Alamgir and her husband, Dr Arbab Alamgir, who is also a PPP leader and ex-communications' minister, was facing a charges of accumulating assets worth Rs332 million which were beyond their known sources of income in a reference filed by the National Accountability Bureau (NAB).
NAB said in its probe that it surfaced that the suspects accumulated movable and immovable assets including a house in G-11/3 Islamabad; 10-kanal land at Mauza Shah Alladitta, Islamabad; a bungalow in F-7/2 Islamabad; prize bonds; a land rover vehicle and several bank transactions.
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