An anti-terrorism court (ATC) yesterday gave one-month’s deadline to former president Pervez Musharraf to surrender in the judges’ detention case.
The court warned that the former military ruler would be declared a proclaimed offender if he failed to comply with the deadline. After directing to the counsel for Musharraf to produce his client before the court, ATC Judge Sohail Ikram adjourned the proceedings to January 13.
On November 22, the judge had asked lawyer Akhtar Shah to argue how he can represent Musharraf even after he was declared a proclaimed offender in a high treason case by the special court.
The lawyer replied that doctors checked his client after every two months and the security situation was not favourable for him in the country. He claimed that under Article 10-A of the constitution, which ensures fair trial, he can represent Musharraf even in his absence.
Public prosecutor Amir Nadeem Tabish, however, said being a fugitive of the law Musharraf could neither seek any relief nor any lawyer could represent him unless he surrendered to the court.
The court then ruled that the counsel cannot seek a relief for Musharraf unless the latter appears before the court.
He said in case Musharraf does not surrender, the court would declare him an absconder.
The judges’ detention case was registered by the Secretariat police on August 11, 2009, on the complaint of Advocate Chaudhry Mohammad Aslam against the former military ruler for confining 60 judges of the superior courts for over five months and restraining them from 
administering justice.


Pervez Musharraf
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