A special court of the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) on Friday dismissed former Securities and Exchange Commission of Pakistan (SECP) chairman Zafar Hijazi's acquittal plea in the Chaudhry Sugar Mills record tampering case.

The court indicted Hijazi on October 27 for tampering with records related to the Sharif family's sugar mills by pressuring his subordinates to change dates on documents pertaining to the mills. Hijazi pleaded not guilty, as his lawyer argued that statements taken from an SECP employee were not sufficient to run a trial on ─ a view that the prosecutor opposed.

Hijazi's lawyer today requested special court judge Irum Niazi to acquit the former SECP head, saying that the allegations against him were baseless and he had not pressured anyone into tampering records related to the mills.

Hijazi's plea for acquittal was rejected and dismissed by the judge, who maintained that there was sufficient evidence to mount a case and conduct a trial against the former SECP chairman.

The FIA was unable to produce witnesses in court today. Subsequently, the hearing was adjourned until Nov 29 and summons were issued to witnesses to appear in court.

Hijazi was taken into FIA custody earlier this year after a report released by the Panama Papers case joint investigation team (JIT), probing then prime minister Nawaz Sharif and his family's wealth, alleged that the former SECP chairman had altered records related to Chaudhry Sugar Mills.

A case was registered against Hijazi on the orders of the Supreme Court after the three-member Panama Papers case implementation bench acted on the JIT report.

'Locked in room for giving statement to JIT'

SECP officials in July told a Senate Standing Committee on Finance that Hijazi had harassed and pressured them into closing the Chaudhry Sugar Mills case.

Dir­e­ctor and Head of Department (HOD) Internal Audit and Com­pliance Depart­ment at the SECP Maheen Fatima ─ who was also an officer dealing with the money-laundering charges against Chaudhry Sugar Mills ─ had alleged that she was locked in a room for talking to the Panama JIT.

"On June 14, I was locked in a room for talking to the JIT members and telling them the factual position regarding closing of the mill’s files," she said.

Maheen Fatima told the committee that Hijazi had forced her to stay in a room for three hours for giving the statement to the JIT.

"He forced me to give an entirely different statement to the JIT and change my previous statement," she said, adding that it was due to the interference of her colleagues that she was allowed to leave the room.

The SECP officials said Hijazi had called them in his office and directed them to close the file of investigation into the mill in June 2016, but in the back date of 2013.

Ali Azeem, Executive Director and HOD Insurance Divi­sion, said. "After I entered the chairman's office, Mr Hijazi was annoyed and disrespectfully quizzed me for writing a letter to the UK authorities over the Chaudhry Sugar Mills case. He then directed me to close the file in back date."

Abid Hussain, Exe­cutive Director and HOD Company Law Division, had said the possible reason for closing the file in back date might be because of the Panama Papers leaks.

Correction: An earlier version of this article said the court had dismissed Hijazi's bail plea. The error is regretted.

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