Imran Khan free of Panama-like suspicion: SC judge

Imran Khan

ISLAMABAD: Justice Faisal Arab, who was a member of the three-judge Supreme Court bench that exonerated the PTI chairman on Friday, observed in his additional note that Imran Khan did not incorporate offshore company Niazi Services Limited (NSL) to park assets acquired through embezzlement, bribery or tax evasion to keep them hidden from the public eye.

Comparing the case of Imran Khan with that of the Panama Papers case in which Nawaz Sharif was disqualified as prime minister, Justice Arab observed that Mr Khan’s case was that of acquisition of an asset from legitimate tax-paid income earned abroad and that too at a time when he was a non-resident Pakistani holding no public office.

“Therefore, [Imran] Khan cannot be perceived with the same suspicion,” the note said, adding that usually those who came to power with the intention of indulging in financial corruption would always want offshore companies to remain operational in order to secretively park their ill-gotten wealth.

Referring to the reliance by PMN-N leader Hanif Abbasi’s counsel Muhammad Akram Sheikh on the Panama Papers case, Justice Arab recalled that in that case, serious allegations of money laundering, corruption and possession of assets beyond known sources of income were made against Nawaz Sharif.

But the sources of acquiring several assets were not satisfactory explained by Mr Sharif and his family members, which included the purchase of four Avenfield flats in London, setting up of Azizia Steel Factory in Saudi Arabia, Gulf Steel Mills in Dubai and receiving Rs840 million on a regular basis over a period of four years from 2011 to 2015 as gifts from an entity called Hills Metals established in Jeddah by Nawaz Sharif, the note added.

It said there was either total or very little explanation as to how these assets were built, who were shareholders, what was the source of funds and how the funds were generated, adding that considering the high-profile office which Nawaz Sharif held over the years, accumulation of his monthly salary from Capital FZE was considered as concealment of an asset which led this court to hold Mr Sharif as dishonest.



The note said that non-disclosure of unspent salary income, which had been accumulating for a period of time, was treated as concealment of asset in the Panama Papers case, whereas in the present case, the ownership of London flat was disclosed by Imran Khan in his nomination form filed in 2002 general elections.

Justice Arab observed that honesty of a person prior to his becoming a lawmaker could only be called in question if he had accumulated wealth through fraud, embezzlement, bribery or tax evasion and had been so declared by a competent court of law.

Insofar his dishonesty with regard to the assets acquired after becoming legislator, the same could be scrutinised by the court in the proceedings in the nature of quo warranto which would determine whether a case for acquisition of assets beyond known sources of income was made out, the judge said.

He observed that concealment of an asset from the public eye that was acquired after entering upon office, for which the member was unable to give a judicially acceptable explanation, was to be treated as an act of concealment with dishonest intentions.

“This is the difference in attributing dishonesty with regard to an omission to disclose an asset acquired before and after becoming a member of the national or a provincial assembly,” Justice Arab observed.

Source: Dawn

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