As the trial began, the National Accountability Bureau (NAB) prosecution presented its first two witnesses in the court - Securities and Exchange Commission of Pakistan (SECP) Joint Registrar Sidra Mansoor and Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) Inland Revenue Department representative Jahangir Ahmad.
Mansoor recorded her statement in the Avenfield flats case, telling the court that she had appeared before the investigation officer in Lahore on August 18, and provided NAB documents containing the Sharif family's financial records, the Dawn reported.
In her statement, Mansoor said the Hudaibiya Paper Mills audit reports consistently showed Rs 49,46,000 in the company's accounts for five years between 2000 to 2005.
When Sharif's lawyer, Khawaja Haris, was given the floor to cross-question the first witness, he observed that the audit reports submitted by the SECP to NAB were photocopies and did not have the company's stamp on them.
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Defending the authenticity of the documents, Mansoor said that the photocopies were provided to the SECP by the Sharifs' company as per the law.
Ahmad has been called to appear in court again on November 22 for cross-questioning in the next hearing.
While the accountability court accepted Sharif's application for exemption from court hearings till November 27, it only conditionally allowed his daughter Maryam one month's exemption from court.
Both Sharif, 67, and Maryam filed separate applications for exemption from future court hearings.
Sharif, in his application, had asked to be exempted from trial hearings as the next spell of his wife's chemotherapy is about to begin.
The NAB prosecutors had objected to both applications.
Talking to media later, Sharif claimed that the Panamagate verdict was given to tell the accountability court to make sure he is punished.
He added that the language used in the Panamagate verdict mirrors the language that his political opponents use.
"These courts have double standards. On one had we can all see the way my case is being treated, on the other we see how other people's cases are treated," he said.
This is the second time the former prime minister moved the IHC to club the three references.
Earlier, the high court had accepted a petition and ordered on November 3 that the matter should be decided by the trial court. However, Accountability Judge Bashir had rejected the plea on November 8.
A five-member bench of the Supreme Court on July 28 had directed NAB to file cases against Sharif and his children in the accountability court and directed the trial court to decide the references within six months.
The three cases against the Sharifs are related to the Flagship Investment Ltd, the Avenfield (London) properties and Jeddah-based Al-Azizia Company and Hill Metal Establishment.
The former premier and his sons, Hassan and Hussain, have been named in all three NAB cases, while Maryam and husband (Capt.) Muhammad Safdar have been named only in the Avenfield reference.
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