Musharraf, 69, who ruled Pakistan for about a decade, following a military coup in which he overthrew Nawaz Sharif, appeared in a court in Karachi for the first time in his life.
"This is the first time, that I ever entered a courtroom in my life. If I was to be very frank with you on my feelings, if you want to know my feelings, the first feeling when I stand up for the judge when he entered which was the norm -- the norm which I had to follow, I did feel somehow a little insulted, a little humiliated," Musharraf told CNN.
When asked if he trusted the judicial system, Musharraf said one has to face all the consequences.
"I know, my conviction is that there is nothing against me. And there were arrest warrants that were issued, for my nonappearance in the court," he said.
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Musharraf said at no point he was in danger when a shoe was thrown at him in the Karachi court room. "I didn't even see it. There was nothing that hit me. Later on, I was told that somebody hurled something. But nothing of that sort was visible," he said.
Advocate Tajammul Lodhi yesterday hurled a shoe at Musharraf in the Sindh High Court corridor but it did not hit him.
Musharraf was required to appear in person in the court to extend the bail allowance. On March 22, a single-judge bench, headed by Chief Justice Mushir Alam, had granted a 10-day bail period to the former president who returned home on Sunday after being in self-imposed exile since 2009.
The court had also granted Musharraf a pre-arrest bail in the Baloch nationalist leader Akbar Bugti and former prime minister Benazir Bhutto murder cases.