
Federal government made the decision:
ISLAMABAD On Tuesday, the federal government made the decision to submit a review appeal about the Shahrukh Jatoi and his accomplices' acquittal in the Shahzeb murder case by the Supreme Court of Pakistan. The Attorney General's (AG) Office said in a letter to the federal government on its decision to review the petition that it was not consulted before Shahrukh Jatoi's acquittal, despite the fact that the Supreme Court had already identified this problem as a crucial constitutional one.
The letter went on to say that the Attorney General's opinion had been requested about such crucial constitutional matters and that his office had previously designated the Shahzeb murder case as a case of terrorism. While the Supreme Court's decision to acquit the defendant departs from previous rulings on terrorism-related offences. According to it, this case is currently being reexamined in light of compromise, land corruption, and other issues.
Justice Ijazul Ahsan presided over a three-judge panel that heard the case. Shahrukh's attorney, Latif Khosa, informed the supreme court at the hearing that a formal pardon had already been granted and that his client had no desire to incite terrorism. Shahzeb was assassinated in 2012 following a minor disagreement in Karachi's defense sector, and this need to be mentioned. Shahrukh and his accomplice Siraj Ali Talpur were given the death punishment by an anti-terrorism court (ATC) for the murder, while Sajjad Ali Talpur and Ghulam Murtaza Lashari received life sentences.

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