Pakistan court denies Musharraf's request to go abroad for medical treatment
On Thursday the Pakistan Supreme Court rejected [JURIST report] a petition by Musharraf to review its 2009 ruling [JURIST report] that his declaration of a state of emergency in 2007 was unconstitutional, the basis for the charges of treason against him. On January 9 the Islamabad Special Court demanded [JURIST report] that Musharraf attend his January 16 hearing, after having demanded [JURIST report] a medical report on January 6 and concluding that he was fit to appear. On December 23, 2013 the court rejected [JURIST report] Musharraf's contention that the treason proceedings were illegitimate and ruled that the trial would proceed as scheduled. The trial for treason is just a portion of Musharraf's legal troubles; in November, 2013 he was granted [JURIST report] bail in his trial for the "Red Mosque" killings, an operation ordered by him in 2007 that resulted in at least 100 deaths. He was arrested [JURIST report] on charges relating to those killings in October. In August 2013 Musharraf was formally charged [JURIST report] in connection with the 2007 assassination of Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto [BBC obituary].
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