ISLAMABAD--Pakistan's Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif on Thursday lashed out at what he called the "slandering" of his family in connection with an investigation of their wealth, and said unidentified people with agendas against him posed a danger to the country.
Sharif was speaking after being grilled by a powerful panel investigating him and his family in an inquiry ordered by the Supreme Court that has gripped Pakistan and become increasingly politicised.
"What is happening here is not about corruption allegations against me, it is about slandering the businesses and accounts of my family," a defiant Sharif, clad in traditional shalwar kameez tunic and trousers, said as he read from a statement.
Sharif, 67, spent about three hours at the offices of the Joint Investigation Team (JIT) in the capital, Islamabad, becoming the first Pakistani prime minister to be questioned by an investigative agency. "No corruption charges have been proven against me in the past and, inshallah (God willing), it will not be so once again," he said.
The Supreme Court agreed last year to investigate the Sharif family's offshore wealth after the opposition threatened protests after the leaking of the "Panama Papers". Documents leaked from the Panama-based Mossack Fonseca law firm appeared to show that Sharif's daughter and two sons owned offshore holding companies registered in the British Virgin Islands and used them to buy luxury properties in London.
The Supreme Court ruled in April there was insufficient evidence to remove Sharif from office over corruption allegations levelled by the opposition, but it ordered further investigations. Sharif, whose father was a prominent industrialist, has said his family wealth was acquired legally.
A three-time prime minister, Sharif was ousted twice in the 1990s, including in a 1999 military coup. He later lived in exile, mostly in Saudi Arabia. He swept back to power in an election in 2013 but rumours of tension between his government and the powerful military, which oversees the foreign relations and national security, occasionally circulate.
Sharif suggested that unidentified enemies acting behind the scenes should be stopped from trying to subvert the wishes of the electorate that handed his party victory in a 2013 general election. "If the factories that produce agendas and silence the decisions of the people are not closed, then not only the law and constitution, but the safety of this country will also be jeopardized," he said.
Pakistan has been plagued by pervasive corruption for decades, with politicians often accusing rivals of underhand dealings. The Supreme Court has given the panel two months to investigate the family and then deliver its findings. The six-man panel, made up of members of civilian investigative agencies and military intelligence officers, are examining three generations of Sharif family wealth.