Sindh High Court Orders Ayyan Ali’s Name To Be Struck Off ECL

Sindh High Court Orders Ayyan Ali’s Name To Be Struck Off ECL

A Sindh High Court division bench has directed authorities to strike supermodel Ayyan Ali’s name off the Exit Control List (ECL).

The Additional Attorney General has sought time for implementation of the order.

The model had approached the court in December requesting the removal of her name from the ECL. Her counsel maintained that having her name on the ECL was illegal as authorities had returned her passport .

During a hearing of her case last year, the model said she was required to travel abroad for professional assignments and medical treatment, and since she had been released from jail on bail, her name should be struck off the ECL.

She said the authorities’ decision to disallow her from travelling abroad was a violation of her fundamental rights guaranteed under Article 18 of the Constitution.

A customs court in Nov 2015 indicted Ayyan for attempting to smuggle more than half a million dollars in cash out of the country, to which she has pleaded not guilty.

The model was arrested on Mar 14, 2015, on charges of money laundering after customs officials recovered $506,000 from her luggage at Islamabad’s Benazir Bhutto International Airport before she could reportedly board a flight to Dubai.

She was granted bail in July last year after spending around four months in Rawalpindi’s Adiala Jail ─ and after her judicial remand was extended at least 16 times.

A case surrounded by controversy

The case involving Ayyan, a well-known face who has endorsed prominent brands, garnered unprecedented media attention due to her celebrity status and the controversies surrounding it.

The case took a political turn when the airport entry pass of the personal assistant (PA) to a former president was cancelled for allegedly trying to facilitate Ayyan’s suspected attempt to smuggle money.

Later in June, a customs official who was allegedly investigating the money laundering case against the model was shot dead.

The model was granted a category B ‘VIP’ inmate at Adiala which entitled her to several privileges not available to other inmates because she was “not habitual of a less-than-comfortable lifestyle”.

Her counsel, former Punjab governor Sardar Latif Khan Khosa earlier said his client had been arrested on false charges of money laundering. He claimed that the Customs Act lacked interpretation of attempted money laundering and that the petitioner had not been allowed to record her statement after the arrest, which was mandatory under Section 139 of the Act.

The model’s counsel had said she told investigators at the initial stages of the investigation that she had acquired the money by selling property. He said the petitioner carried the money to the airport to hand it over to her brother who was arriving from Dubai the same day.

 

This news was previously published in DAWN and it is being republished here with permission.