in ,

Govt wrote letter to block Musharraf’s NIC, passport few months prior

Pakistan’s Interior Ministry has asked for the suspension of former President Pervez Musharraf’s computerised national identity card (CNIC) and passport, a media report said on Friday.

In compliance with the order of a special court, the ministry on Thursday asked the National Database and Registration Authority (Nadra) and the Directorate General of Immigration and Passports to carry out the suspensions, the Dawn report said.

After the suspension of his identity card and passport, Musharraf’s bank accounts would be frozen and his international travelling restricted.

A letter by the Ministry of Interior Affairs requesting the National Database and Registration Authority (NADRA) to block the national identity card (NIC) of former president General (retd) Pervez Musharraf said to be written Thursday was, in fact, penned a few months prior, sources informed Geo News.

The letter had called for Musharraf’s passport to stand invalid once his identity card was blocked, barring him from travelling anywhere, sources mentioned, adding that the former president’s bank accounts in Pakistan would be frozen as well. Added, geo.tv.

A special court hearing a high treason case against Musharraf had on March 8 directed the ministry to suspend his passport and CNIC. The court had also ordered the ministry and other departments, divisions and agencies to take steps for the arrest of Musharraf and attachment of his properties abroad.

The former military ruler is facing the treason trial for subverting the constitution by declaring a state of emergency in November 2007, Dawn news reported. Ending his self-imposed exile, the former military ruler returned to the country in March 2013 and a ban was imposed on his travel abroad by courts the following month. After three years, in March 2016, he was able to leave for Dubai seeking medical treatment and has since not returned.

Is Life a Lucid Dream or a Path to Reality?

US President Trump to receive Kim letter as nuclear summit takes shape