Pakistan opposition leader on 10-day remand over graft allegations

In this file photo, supporters of Shahbaz Sharif, brother of ex-prime minister Nawaz Sharif, and leader of Pakistan Muslim League - Nawaz (PML-N) use their mobile phones to take photos of him during a campaign rally ahead of general elections in the Lyari neighborhood in Karachi, Pakistan June 26, 2018. (AFP)
Updated 06 October 2018
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Pakistan opposition leader on 10-day remand over graft allegations

  • Shahbaz Sharif was arrested on Friday, the accountability court on Saturday issued a 10-day physical remand
  • PML-N and other opposition parties condemned the arrest

LAHORE: An accountability court in Lahore has issued a 10-day physical remand for opposition leader Shahbaz Sharif to Pakistan’s anti-graft body, the National Accountability Bureau (NAB).
The NAB presented Sharif before Judge Syed Najmul Hasan amid tight security on Saturday. A day earlier, the NAB arrested Sharif for alleged misappropriations in the Ashiana Housing Scheme in Lahore during his tenure as chief minister of Punjab province from 2013 to 2018.
The NAB launched a probe into the scandal after the housing scheme failed to materialize due to the alleged corruption.
Sharif, president of the Pakistan Muslim League — Nawaz (PML-N), had appeared before NAB authorities on Friday to record his statement in another case, but he was detained.
The NAB said it has “sufficient evidence” against the accused, and has already arrested several close aides of Sharif in connection with the corruption scandal. 
During Saturday’s accountability court hearing, he called the NAB’s allegations baseless. Several hundred PML-N workers and party leaders gathered outside the judicial complex and chanted slogans in support of Sharif.
PML-N Chairman Raja Zafrul Haq told Arab News that Sharif’s arrest is “pre-poll rigging as by-elections are to be held next week,” and “is aimed at keeping him away from the process. We demand his earliest release.”
The Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) also condemned Sharif’s arrest, telling Arab News: “Investigations should be carried out across the board, not only against members of opposition parties.”
Senior political analyst Salim Bokhari said the arrest “may further augment political rivalry between the ruling party and the united opposition.”


Trump threatens to halt US trade with Spain over military bases, defense spending

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Trump threatens to halt US trade with Spain over military bases, defense spending

  • The US relocated 15 aircraft, including refueling tankers, from the Rota and Moron military bases in southern Spain after the country’s Socialist leadership said it would not allow them to be used to attack Iran
  • Spain’s Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, one ​of a dwindling number of left-leaning voices in Europe, has ​risked Trump’s ire with a series of other policy moves, including refusing to let vessels transporting weapons to Israel dock in Spain

WASHINGTON/MADRID: US President Donald Trump threatened to impose a full US trade embargo on Spain on Tuesday ​after the European and NATO ally refused to let the US military use its bases for missions linked to strikes on Iran.
“Spain has been terrible,” Trump told reporters during a meeting with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, adding that he had told Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent to “cut off all dealings” with Spain.
“We’re going to cut off all trade with Spain. We don’t want anything to do with Spain,” he added.
The US relocated 15 aircraft, including refueling tankers, from the Rota and Moron military bases in southern Spain after the country’s Socialist leadership said it would not allow them to be used to attack Iran.
Trump again referenced Spain’s refusal to heed US calls for all NATO members to spend 5 percent of their GDP on defense, and added: “Spain has absolutely nothing that we need.”
“All business having to do ‌with Spain, I ‌have the right to stop it. Embargoes — do anything I want with it — and ​we ‌may ⁠do that with ​Spain,” ⁠he said, again expressing his frustration with the Supreme Court’s ruling last month that his broadest global tariffs were illegal under a national emergencies law.

NO SEPARATE TREATMENT FOR SPAIN
Merz, speaking with reporters after the meeting, said he told Trump privately that Spain could not be excluded from a trade agreement reached between Brussels and Washington last year.
“I said that Spain is a member of the European Union and we negotiate about tariffs with the United States only together or not at all,” he said. “There is no way to treat Spain particularly badly.”
Trump publicly asked Bessent and US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer their opinions on cutting off Spanish trade.
“Well, sir, I think we’ll talk about it with you,” Greer said. “We know ⁠you can use it, and if you need to use it to assure national and economic ‌security, we’ll do it.”
Bessent said the Supreme Court affirmed Trump’s embargo powers under the ‌International Emergency Economic Powers Act, adding that the USTR and Commerce Department would ​begin investigations into how to penalize Spain under other trade laws.

HIGH BAR
Jennifer ‌Hillman, a trade law professor at Georgetown University, said the Supreme Court did not address the president’s ability to impose a trade ‌embargo under IEEPA. Trump could do so, but he would have to declare a national emergency over Spain as an “unusual and extraordinary” threat to the United States, she said, adding that such a move would go “well beyond” any previous emergency.
“It’s hard to see, however, how Spain denying us the use of air bases on its territory for us to launch an unprovoked attack on Iran poses ‘an unusual and extraordinary threat’ to our national security or foreign ‌policy,” added Peter Shane, a New York University adjunct law professor.

SPAIN RESPONDS
The Spanish government responded in a statement that the US must be mindful of the autonomy of private businesses, international law ⁠and bilateral trade agreements between ⁠the US and the European Union.
Madrid said it had the necessary resources to contain the potential impact of a trade embargo and support affected sectors, but said it would continue to push for free trade and economic cooperation with its partners.
Spain is the world’s top exporter of olive oil and also sells auto parts, steel and chemicals to the United States, but is less vulnerable to Trump’s threats of economic punishment than other European nations.
The US had a trade surplus with Spain for the fourth year in a row in 2025, at $4.8 billion, according to US Census Bureau data, with US exports of $26.1 billion and imports of $21.3 billion. US exports of crude oil and liquefied natural gas to Spain have grown in recent years.
Merz said pressure was being brought to bear on Spain from within Europe on defense spending.
“We are trying to convince Spain to catch up with the 3 percent or 3.5 percent which we agreed on in NATO,” he said, adding later that Spain’s defense spending levels had nothing to do with the trade negotiations.
Spain’s Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, one ​of a dwindling number of left-leaning voices in Europe, has ​risked Trump’s ire with a series of other policy moves, including refusing to let vessels transporting weapons to Israel dock in Spain.