THE STATE versus QADAR GUL
Section 417 Customs Act (IV of 1969), Sections 2 (s), 156 (1) (89), 157, 165 and 178 Prohibition (Enforcement Hadith) Order (4 of 1979), charge of breach of Arts 3/4. The defendants appealed were the heroin powder weighing 700 kilograms and 190 yards of foreign origin was recovered from the suspected bus parts of the bus operated by the accused, a special judge acquitted the accused. It has been reported that both confiscated items were not proved. Under Section 165 of the Customs Act, 1969, the customs official was accused of foreign origin in his confessional statements, he reasonably suspected his crime prosecution and acknowledged that the accused had committed the offense under Section 2 (s) of the Customs Act 1969. I had taken the said heroin, and declared, not required by law, in the circumstances, to prove that the heroin recovered from the accused was aliens, the accused had to produce evidence to refute the prosecution. Ion, but they failed to do so. The trial court found the defendants in possession of the confiscated goods, but held them only by concluding that the confiscated items had not been proven to be of foreign origin, under the possession of heroin powder under accused S. : 2 (s) of the Customs Act, 1969, appeal was allowed against the accused and the accused were convicted under Section 156 (1) (89) of the Customs Act 1969 and sentenced to 6 years RI.
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