KARACHI, May 24 (AFP) - The jailed husband of former Pakistan premier Benazir Bhutto was accused in court Monday of killing a judge and his son, court sources said. Asif Ali Zardari, who is in hospital after being injured during a police interrogation last week, and another man, Babar Sindhu, were named by police in the killing of Sindh High Court judge Nizam Ahmed and his son in June 1996. Anti-terrorism Court Judge Rehmat Hussain Jafri ordered Zardari to appear in court on May 30, court officials said. Lawyers said the Zardari will be formally charged with the double murder after police submit to the court their final report into the killings. When Zardari was taken to hospital last Thursday with injuries to his neck and mouth, police said the wounds were self-inflicted to avoid interrogation, but Bhutto and other family members accused interrogators of torturing him. Zardari has been in jail since the dismissal of Bhutto's government in November, 1996 under a presidential decree. Along with several former police and intelligence officials he is facing trial on charges of involvement in the killing of Bhutto's estranged brother, Mir Murtaza in a police shootout on Septmber 20, 1996. Zardari and Bhutto were both convicted on April 15 by a high court accountability bench for graft and sentenced to five years imprisonment. The court found them guilty of receiving millions of dollars in kickbacks from a Swiss firm in return for a 1994 pre-shipment trade cargo inspection contract. Bhutto, who is currently in London, denied the charges and termed it a "politically motivated."  