HomeNewsWorldPakistan court annuls Musharraf's death penalty; declares special tribunal's ruling 'unconstitutional'

Pakistan court annuls Musharraf's death penalty; declares special tribunal's ruling 'unconstitutional'

The Lahore HC ruling came in response to a petition filed challenging formation of a special court for the high treason case

January 13, 2020 / 20:15 IST
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The Lahore High Court on January 13 ruled the formation of a special court that handed former Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf to death for high treason as unconstitutional.

In a major relief for Pakistan's self-exiled former military dictator, the court declared his "complaint and trial" in the high treason case as "unconstitutional" leading to the annulment of his death penalty by a special tribunal.

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The special court of Islamabad on December 17 last handed down the death penalty to 74-year-old Musharraf after six years of hearing the high-profile treason case against him. The case was filed by the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz government in 2013.

A three-member full bench of the Lahore High Court, comprising Justices Syed Mazahar Ali Akbar Naqvi, Mohammad Ameer Bhatti and Chaudhry Masood Jahangir, unanimously declared the formation of the special court against Musharraf as "unconstitutional".