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Islamabad: Pakistan's ousted premier Nawaz Sharif raised questions over the Supreme Court's verdict to disqualify him and said the decision was taken before concluding the hearing in the Panama Papers scandal.
Sharif was disqualified by the Supreme Court on July 28 over undeclared assets brought to light in the 2016 Panama Papers leak.
"The decision to disqualify me had already been taken, only a justification was being sought," he told reporters.
He said there was big debate in the country over his disqualification as people were not satisfied with the reason cited by the court to send him home.
He said being the elected prime minister of Pakistan he had certain rights and it was important that various institutions respect each other.
Sharif also challenged the court over the trial of former military dictator Pervez Musharraf and asked if there were any judges in the country who could hold Musharraf accountable.
"Is there any court which can hold former dictators responsible for crimes like breaking up the country," he asked.
Sharif said he had not misappropriated even a single penny and it was wrong to say that he was trying to dodge accountability.
He said he appeared before the probe panel set up by the Supreme Court despite suggestion he was not bound to face the interrogation.
According to a PTI report, Sharif is scheduled to go back to Lahore on Wednesday by the GT Road and opposition has criticised that he was using it to interact with supporters to put pressure on the courts. However, he rejected the impression and said it was a "journey back home and not a protest."
(With PTI inputs)
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