Chairman PTI investigated by FIA team in cipher case in Attock Jail Shah Mahmood Qureshi moves IHC to declare orders pertaining to his physical remand in cypher case

Chairman PTI investigated by FIA team in cipher case in Attock Jail

Shah Mahmood Qureshi moves IHC to declare orders pertaining to his physical remand in cypher case null & void

ATTOCK, ISLAMABAD ( Web News )

A team of the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) has investigated Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) Chairman and former prime minister Imran Khan in Attock Jail in the US cipher case.

According to media reports, the former prime minister was also questioned about the alleged disappearance of the cipher.

According to sources, the FIA cybercrime team under the leadership of Deputy Director Ayaz investigated Imran Khan.

The suspect was questioned for more than an hour regarding the illegal use and disappearance of the cipher.

Imran Khan is serving a sentence in the Toshakhana criminal case, awarded by the sessions court of Islamabad.

An FIR was registered against him, PTI Vice Chairman Makhdoom Shah Mahmood Qureshi and other party leaders under the Official Secrets Act and the PPC over illegal use of and misplacement of the cipher.

According to the FIR, the case was registered against the PTI chairman and Qureshi on August 15 over the alleged misplacement of a diplomatic cable from the US under sections 5 and 9 of the Official Secrets Act 1923 read with Section 34 of the PPC.

The FIR was registered on the application of Interior Secretary Yousaf Naseem Khokhar.

Shah Mahmood Qureshi moved  IHC on cypher case

Former foreign minister and Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) Vice Chairman Makhdoom Shah Mahmood Qureshi moved the Islamabad High Court (IHC) on Saturday to declare orders pertaining to his physical remand in cypher case null and void.

The PTI vice-chairman, arrested in the cypher case registered under the Official Secrets Act 1923, filed a petition against three orders of physical remand passed by the trial court on August 20, 21 and 25.

“The Official Secrets Act court’s order to give physical remand should be declared null and void, said the petition, adding an order for a judicial remand should be passed. It further stated that a “malicious case” was filed against Shah Mahmood Qureshi with the “connivance of the federal government” for “political vendetta”.

Qureshi further added that an investigation was conducted by the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA). “I neither took the cypher telegram nor disclosed its transcript to any unauthorized person. Records prove that the cypher is with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs,” he stated.

The PTI stalwart maintained that despite all these facts, the FIA arrested and successfully obtained physical remand. “The trial court granted physical remand, despite the prosecution failing to produce any evidence. Even in the FIR, the cypher is alleged to be in the possession of someone else,” he pleaded. The federation and the home secretary have been made parties in the petition submitted.

Shah Mahmood Qureshi, in the end, stated that he had conveyed the message to the then-prime minister as per the law while performing his duties as foreign minister.

Last week, the FIA arrested Qureshi from his residence in the federal capital.

The agency had booked former premier Imran Khan and Qureshi among others for “wrongful use” of official secret information and illegal retention of the cypher telegram – an official secret document – with malafide intention.

The FIR No 6/2023 read that the role of the former prime minister’s principal secretary Azam Khan, ex-planning minister Asad Umar, and other associates involved would be determined during the course of investigations.

The counter-terrorism wing (CTW) of the FIA had registered a case under sections 5 (wrongful communication, etc, of information) and 9 (attempts, incitements, etc) of the Official Secrets Act of 1923 read with Section 34 (common intention) of the Pakistan Penal Code on the complaint of the then Interior Secretary Yousaf Naseem Khokhar in Islamabad.

The FIR revealed that the case had been registered upon the conclusion of an enquiry No111/2023 dated Oct 5, 2022, registered in the FIA’s CTW.

It read that Imran, Qureshi, and their associates were involved in the communication of information contained in a secret classified document – a cypher telegram received from Parep Washington dated March 7, 2022, by the foreign affairs secretary – to unauthorised persons (public at large) by “twisting the facts to achieve their ulterior motives and personal gains in a manner prejudicial to the interests of state security”.